Tuesday, March 1, 2022

23 thoughts on the war in Ukraine

23 thoughts on the war in Ukraine
I imagine that most of you have been reading and thinking a lot about Russia and Ukraine over the past week. Certainly I have. My thoughts are still a bit scattered, though, and I figured it would be better to present them non-traditionally than to try to strong-arm them into a column format. Here’s what I’ve been thinking about:

A daily Substack newsletter written by a generalist take slinger is not the best place to get up-to-the-minute news about a fast-changing military situation. I’m going to stick to points that I am not seeing made clearly elsewhere, acknowledging that Slow Boring should not be your primary source of information on this topic.

War is a deeply zero-sum undertaking. As I wrote recently, invading Ukraine is a really bad idea and does not seem to be going as well for Russia as they had hoped. Putin is causing the encirclement he hoped to avoid, alienating people (like me!) who hoped the U.S. would seek a rapprochement with Russia, and causing some of the Putin fanboys on the nationalist right to slink away from their prior praise. But none of that means Ukraine will actually prevail. The odds are strongly in Russia’s favor against Ukraine, but Russia itself will almost certainly be worse off.

It really is worth reiterating how perverse this is. Ukraine posed no threat to Russia and doesn’t have any particularly valuable economic resources. Trying to prop up a puppet regime in a destroyed and sullen country is going to be costly in the best-case scenario and a bleeding insurgency in the worst. Initiating this war is gambling with Putin’s own grasp on power. It’s incredibly reckless and stupid.

That recklessness and stupidity is itself terrifying. I think it’s clear that the American government sees a distinction between the real but limited support it is willing to offer Ukraine and the support we would offer NATO members. But is that clear to Putin? Can he judge the odds correctly?

This, rather than Russia’s hurt feelings, has always been the problem with the post-1991 persistence and expansion of NATO. In the Cold War, we believed the Soviets sought to turn the whole world communist and thus that defending West Germany was not an act of charity but an act of prudent self-preservation. And the Soviets believed that we believed that. Putin’s Russia is not like that. The security umbrella we’ve extended to Eastern and Central Europe really is a favor the United States is doing. Which means there are inherent questions about its credibility. Which means trouble.

But trying to undo these unwise security guarantees would only make things worse. We somewhat carelessly committed to defending Estonia and Latvia, assuming that the job could be done with cheap talk, and now we need to be prepared to actually do it.

Over-reliance on strategic nuclear weapons in this regard is risky. Just as the basic idea of a pledge to defend these countries has inherent credibility problems, the idea of an American president ordering a nuclear first strike to retaliate for a fait accompli in Tallinn is so non-credible that it risks being put to the test.

More than sanctions, more than support for Ukraine, what we need now is a real plan for the defense of NATO’s frontline countries. That means the “provocative” moves that have been avoided in the past, including stationing large numbers of troops in the area in question. I don’t want to play armchair general about exactly which troops and where, but I’ll wave in the direction of Ian Bond’s report for the Center for European Studies. The point is that these should be real military deployments and not “tripwire” forces that exist just to be gunned down by the Russians. To avoid a nuclear war, we need a concrete and plausible strategy to fight and win a conventional one.

This is really scary. When I wrote about “Don’t Look Up” and existential risk, I didn’t really mention nuclear war. When Derek Parfit did the original philosophical treatment of existential risk, he had nukes in mind. But as ideas around longtermism, rationalism, and effective altruism gained steam in the 21st century, this particular genre of x-risk had come to feel quaint and distant. But it’s clearly back on the table.

Longtime Russia hawks see this February’s events as vindication of their longstanding views. I respectfully disagree. This downward spiral in U.S.-Russia relations is a genuine disaster that meaningfully raises the odds of apocalypse, distracts the United States from other priorities, and generally is exactly the thing we should have been trying harder to avoid in our thinking around everything from the decision not to disband NATO to our handling of Kosovo. In particular, note that our forceful backing of Euromaidan in 2014 looks in the fullness of time like a successful gambit to weaken Russia but has done the Ukrainian people no favors.

What the United States really needs to do is ultimately hand off the European security portfolio to the countries of Europe. Russia is a big and important country. But Germany and France combine to equal Russia’s population, France is about 60 percent richer than Russia (Germany is richer than that), and France has nuclear weapons. The United States should aim to be open-handed and helpful with European security, but we really need to be minding the store in Asia where our allies are not nearly as strong.

By the same token, the arrangement where Finland, Sweden, Austria, and Ireland are in the EU but not NATO seems very ambiguous and dangerous to me. In the case of Ireland, it doesn’t matter at all in practice, but for Sweden and especially Finland, it really does.

Speaking of allies, note the total uselessness of America’s friends in the Middle East during this crisis. The UAE wouldn’t vote to condemn the invasion in the UN. Saudi Arabia is not opening the oil spigots to stabilize the world economy. Indeed, the Saudis and the Emiratis spent all fall and winter working hand-in-glove with the Russians to drive oil and gas scarcity. From their standpoint, it’s realpolitik, which is fair enough. But make no mistake about the terms of this alliance: the United States of America does favors for these countries, and in exchange, they give money to influential Americans while doing no favors for the American people.

Now more than ever! Any pundit worth his salt argues that the right solution to any crisis is to the stuff they’ve supported all along:

— Size and economic strength matter; One Billion Americans!

— Domestic energy production is incredibly valuable. The focus should be on zero-carbon sources first, but trying to strangle domestic fossil fuel output while we’re still relying on it is risky.

— Pushing hard to speed up the pace of electrifying everything is really good.

— The people who’ve been pushing, successfully, to turn off nuclear plants are a menace to the world.

— Investing in useful things is better than spare fiscal capacity. Germany’s long years of low deficits do absolutely nothing to get them out from under the Russian natural gas squeeze. They could and should have been spending the past decade building an alternative.

When tossing out ideas, it’s worth trying to be clear about what your idea is intended to achieve. Hurting Russian national power, hurting Putin and members of his regime personally, and helping Ukraine are three different goals with some tension among them. Thinking about refugees from a humanitarian standpoint, the best thing to do is resettle lots of Ukrainians in Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, and New York. But from the standpoint of sticking it to Putin, we want to invest in building large refugee camps in Poland, Hungary, Slovakia, and Romania near the border with Ukraine that can serve as centers of agitation and insurgent activity. Deciding what’s actually best requires some thought, consideration, and clarity about the goal.

Left-wing critics of the American foreign policy establishment get a lot right, but one trend that needs to die is the habit of seeing contemporary Russia through a lens of Cold War hostility to American capitalism. Putin’s speech on Russia was very clear: he’s a right-wing Russian nationalist who sees his country as the heir to the pre-Soviet Russian Empire and himself as the standard-bearer for the old formula of autocracy, orthodoxy, and nationality.

Conversely, the populist backlash era has given us the bizarre idea that there can be some kind of international brotherhood of nationalist movements all united by an agenda of lib-owning. This doesn’t work. Russian nationalism and Ukrainian nationalism make incompatible claims about Donbas and Crimea and NATO but also about the historical significance of Kievan Rus’ and the existence of an East Slavic dialect continuum and a million other things. A dose or two of patriotic feeling is healthy and proper. But “nationalism” doesn’t answer questions or solve problems absent strong buffers of liberalism.

Note that if you tone down the “nationalist international” by like 20 percent, you end up with a much more reasonable agenda — immigration causes changes that some people don’t like, and the governing authorities in the European Union have made a lot of bad calls. That’s different from saying that Italian and French and Hungarian hard nationalism can collaborate productively under the auspices of Russian revanchism. That doesn’t make sense.

Tyler Cowen has a piece on Putin as a man of ideas. Specifically, Putin’s ideas are those of the 19th century Slavophiles who have now rebranded as “Eurasianists” to acknowledge that Poles, Croats, etc. want nothing to do with this. They were opposed by the westernerizers who saw Russia as part of a larger set of European countries whose publics were suffering from a lack of liberalism and democracy and modernity and economic development.

The westernizers were right then and right today. The high points of Russian culture — Lermontov, Gogol, Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, Bely, Bulgakov, Tchaikovsky, Eisenstein, etc. — are firmly part of the western cultural tradition. Liberal democracy now has firm roots in places as far afield as Japan and South Korea, and there’s nothing about the orthodox soul that prohibits it from blossoming in Omsk and Perm and Nizhny Novgorod. Despite its considerable natural resource wealth, today’s Russia is poorer than Latvia or Lithuania. With reform, peace, and integration into the European mainstream, Russia would be a richer, better place to be. On its current course, it’ll be the junior partner in an alliance with a China that has its own nationalist schemes.

Things change. Like a lot of Jewish Americans, I have family roots in Eastern Galicia, which was long part of the Habsburg Empire, then ended up in Poland between the world wars, and is now in Ukraine. I think my great-grandparents would have found the idea of a Jewish comedian leading a Ukrainian nationalist movement to be absolutely insane. Even the idea of Polish and Lithuanian and Ukrainian nationalists all cooperating effectively to check Moscow rather than fighting over Vilnius versus Wilno and Lviv versus Lwow would have seemed far-fetched. China and Russia used to be allied (with China as the junior partner) because they were both communist. Then China aligned with the U.S. Now Russia is with China and they’re both right-wing nationalists. Life is weird. But note that injections of liberalism allow for cooperation rather than conflict and let Ukraine leverage the talents of its Jewish citizens rather than expel them.

If you find yourself doomscrolling, ask what you could be doing instead. These are not strongly partisan issues, so any calls you make to your members of Congress will make a difference. And even more so than on climate, your personal consumption decisions matter here. I don’t think Joe Biden and Olaf Sholz should pull a Jimmy Carter and urge everyone to put on a sweater and turn down the thermostat. But I’ll say it: if you’re doomscrolling and your home is heated with gas, turn the thermostat down a degree instead. Walk somewhere instead of driving. People elsewhere are making much bigger sacrifices.

Off ramps. We can’t just escalate and escalate. There has to be some goal in mind that counts as a win and lets people back down. Right now, I’m not sure what that is.

Bill Barr’s sudden conversion shows how Trump will keep haunting the GOP

Bill Barr’s sudden conversion shows how Trump will keep haunting the GOP

Paul Waldman — Read time: 4 minutes


William P. Barr has traveled the road to Damascus and arrived with a book he’d like you to buy.


The former attorney general, whose tireless labors in President Donald Trump’s service made him one of the most sinister villains in an administration brimming with moral depravity, is here to tell you that he was shocked, shocked by what he saw.


“Trump cared only about one thing: himself,” Barr writes in a new book that is full of criticism of the former president. “Country and principle took second place.”


Barr’s conversion from Trump lackey to Trump critic is particularly vivid, but he might not be the last person to have such a change of heart. It all depends on how long Trump’s hold on the Republican Party lasts, and how that shapes the ambitions of other Republicans.


Barr is in his 70s now, and he may not be eager for another government job, so a rehabilitation tour is in order. As a shrewd operator, Barr surely knows that history will not be kind to Trump, so he wants to make sure everyone knows how repulsed he was by what he saw.


But does he think we’re going to just forget the way he enabled Trump’s assault on the integrity of the Justice Department and the entire government? The way he misled the public about what was in the special counsel’s report on Russian electoral interference to make Trump seem utterly innocent, when Barr had read the report but it had not yet been released?


The way he forced out U.S. attorneys who might investigate Trump? The way he spread preposterous lies about voter fraud in advance of the 2020 election? The way he took extraordinary steps to help Trump cronies escape accountability for their criminal conduct? Barr’s name will forever be tied to Trump’s, as it should be.


For other Republicans, this is a tricky moment, made deeply uncomfortable by the presence of a pro-Vladimir Putin wing within the GOP. Even if it consists primarily of Trump and the repellent Fox News host Tucker Carlson — who has gone from spreading covid disinformation to running segments so friendly toward Putin that they’re replayed on Russian state TV — it was merely an embarrassment before now, rather than a political problem.


But with nearly the entire world united against Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, Republicans find themselves caught between joining that popular cause and repudiating Trump, which no one who wants to have an electoral future in the GOP thinks they can do.


So on ABC’s “This Week,” host George Stephanopoulos tried to get Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) to condemn Trump’s effusive praise of Putin’s invasion, leaving Cotton to awkwardly dodge the question. Sensing blood, Stephanopoulos asked the question four times, and Cotton kept dodging.


As a Republican with presidential ambitions of his own, Cotton would almost certainly prefer that Trump fade away, or at least not run for the White House. Unfortunately, Trump seems to be doing just the opposite: Speaking at the Conservative Political Action Conference over the weekend, he again vowed another bid. “We did it twice, and we’ll do it again,” he said to the cheering crowd. “We’re going to be doing it again a third time.”


This is the ongoing dilemma for Republicans: When Trump gets attention these days, it’s usually because he’s facing more legal jeopardy for his ethically challenged business practices, or because he said something shocking or despicable. If Trump says, “Tax cuts are good and abortion is bad,” it doesn’t make news; if he offers tributes to murderous dictators, it does.


That means Republicans will keep getting asked to defend the worst of Trump’s words and deeds. They might try to say it’s not their business or they’re concerned about more meaningful issues, but that just opens them up to more questions, given that there are few things reporters are more drawn to than intraparty tension.


Even if Trump doesn’t run again in 2024, he will continue to hang over everything Republicans do. They’ll have to answer for their own roles in enabling him. They’ll have to say whether they agree with what he says. And they have to detail the limits of their future support for him.


There will be no resolution to this problem as long as Trump and Trumpism exist. Nor will Republicans escape their own recent pasts. No amount of tell-all books and pleas to move on will make Trump’s aides and supporters emerge from this period looking unsullied.


But perhaps they knew this when Trump asked them to set fire to whatever integrity they had, to hitch their own ambitions to his debased crusade for self-aggrandizement, and they agreed. Barr was one of the most enthusiastic volunteers, and like the others, he will not be able to rewrite history. They made their bargain, and they cannot hide who they are and what they did.

Biden’s harsh new sanctions are aimed at crippling Putin’s defenses

Biden’s harsh new sanctions are aimed at crippling Putin’s defenses

Greg Sargent — Read time: 4 minutes


Ever since the United States and its allies announced sanctions against Russia to halt its invasion of Ukraine, the effort faced a big unknown. What if Vladimir Putin has already insulated himself from their effects — by building up reserves protecting the ruble and with repressive measures protecting himself politically — rendering any such onslaught moot?


The Biden administration just announced another round of harsh sanctions targeting the Russian president that appear aimed at solving that problem. The stakes of success just got higher: If this effort can work — a big “if” — it could show that multilateral action in defense of the liberal international order can produce results at a time when that order is looking rather bruised and battered.


The latest sanctions, which senior administration officials outlined on a Monday call with reporters, target Russia’s central bank. In concert with other allied nations, the effort will cut off the central bank from the international system, to prevent it from using currency reserves to insulate the Russian economy from the broader sanctions onslaught.


“No country is sanctions-proof,” one official said. “Fortress Russia will be exposed as a myth.”


Here’s how the latest effort works. The official noted that Putin has set aside a “war chest” of $630 billion in reserves, to keep the Russian economy stable. Putin had hoped to hold off the impact of other sanctions imposed over the weekend by using those reserves to keep the ruble stable.


“Our strategy, to put it simply, is to make sure the Russian economy goes backward as long as President Putin decides to go forward with his invasion,” another Biden official told reporters.


Officials noted that the United States and its allies learned over the weekend that the Russian central bank has been trying to bring back its dollar reserves from various places they are held all over the world, to use them to prop up the economy and ruble.


Freezing transactions with the central bank and disconnecting it from the global financial system, the second official said, “will significantly hinder their ability to do that.”


The idea here, notes Edward Fishman, a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council and former State Department official, is that Putin hoped to use those dollar reserves to buy rubles and ruble-backed assets. Fishman says Putin aimed to “prop up the value of the ruble” by “artificially creating demand” for it.


“He will be effectively barred from using his war chest to stem the currency crisis,” Fishman told me,” which could have “ripple effects across the entire economy.”


But this effort also appears targeted at Putin’s defenses in a deeper sense.


A big question is whether Putin has overestimated his ability to weather the economic havoc that the sanctions onslaught is unleashing. Putin’s confidence turns on both the existence of those reserves and on the idea that after his repressive autocratic reign, no amount of popular economic misery could cause him sufficient political discomfort to matter.


These new actions strike at both those shields. Cutting off those reserves mechanically removes one line of defense, of course. But the act of trying to destabilize Russia’s currency aims at Putin’s political defenses in a more fundamental sense.


“The way he built his original base of support was by stabilizing Russia after the hyperinflation and wild currency crises that were endemic to Russia in the 1990s,” Fishman told me. “What we’re seeing now is Putin’s side of the bargain in that social contract unravel entirely.”


“This is sort of a last-ditch effort to change Putin’s calculus, and to show him there are dire consequences for military action,” Fishman added. As Bloomberg’s Timothy L. O’Brien argues, this could constitute a “violent financial awakening” for Putin that he didn’t anticipate.


We have no idea whether this will work precisely because discerning Putin’s cost-benefit analysis — the point at which costs might outweigh benefits, and indeed how vulnerable he is to costs at all — is extremely challenging.


But one possibility is that widespread economic dislocation does render Putin somewhat more open to some kind of settlement. That might entail Ukraine’s agreeing to honor Putin’s demands that it refrain from further security cooperation with the West in a way he can accept.


It should go without saying that a potential halt to hostilities would most likely have been unthinkable without the extraordinary tenacity and bravery of the Ukrainian people. But the mere fact that such an aggressive multilateral sanctions effort has taken place is itself a surprising turn of events.


It suggests Putin has provoked far more concerted international efforts in the face of aggression from one of the world’s most powerful militaries than many expected.


“Once the Europeans realized that Putin really is bringing back invading other countries in today’s Europe,” said Fishman, “they came together with the United States to throw the single biggest sanctions action they could muster at the Russian government.”


Putin may still be able to weather this. But he almost certainly didn’t expect that outcome.

Republicans have laid a dangerous trap for Biden. Here’s how to avoid it.

Republicans have laid a dangerous trap for Biden. Here’s how to avoid it.

Paul Waldman, Greg Sargent — Read time: 4 minutes

While the recent news has been dominated by the war in Ukraine, no issue has gotten more attention over the past few months than inflation. An inescapable drumbeat of stories has explored price increases from every possible angle.


Meanwhile, Republicans are unified in their endlessly repeated belief that first, this is the worst economic calamity in history, and second, it’s all President Biden’s fault. This has persuaded some Democrats to adopt a largely defensive crouch on the economy, but it’s a trap: It’s making voters more inclined to believe the Republican story about this moment, rather than less.


So when Biden delivers his first State of the Union address Tuesday night, he should avoid this trap. He speaks against the background of an argument among Democrats about how much they should be saying they feel voters’ pain, and how much they should tout the substantial economic progress that has been made in the past year.


On a conference call Monday, senior White House officials gave some hints about where he might be leaning in this argument.


Part of Biden’s speech will address the infrastructure bill he signed in November. Expect a laundry list of projects and improvements that are underway because of the bill, to convince people watching that even if they haven’t yet seen the results of the bill, they will soon.


And there will be some bragging about the state of the economy — but not as much as you might expect, given the administration’s pretty remarkable success.


We can argue about how much credit Biden deserves for that success, but the numbers are undeniable: gross domestic product growth in 2021 was 5.7 percent, and more than 6 million jobs were created, more than in any year on record.


Again, you can quibble about what produced the latter — we were pulling ourselves out of a terrible recession — but how many Americans have even heard it? If most presidents could boast that their first year saw the creation of more jobs than any calendar year in American history, they’d never stop talking about it.


But this White House is terribly worried that if they brag too much, someone will think they’re not in touch with what Americans are going through. Which may be why, on that call, White House officials laid out four groups of proposals Biden will discuss, and three were about reducing prices.


Biden, they said, intends to promote more domestic manufacturing and strengthen supply chains; take direct steps to reduce everyday costs for consumers; promote competition to reduce prices; and create more well-paying jobs.


All too often, Democrats remain fundamentally defensive about the economy. When they start and finish every sentence with “We know prices are high, it’s tough out there, and we get it,” that reinforces the perception that inflation is the only thing we should talk about.


There are signs that Biden will lean toward emphasizing his accomplishments. Democrats are circulating a memo on Capitol Hill — likely approved by the White House — indicating that Biden will address “the progress of the last year in the face of deep challenges” and his “optimism for the future.”


If so, Biden will be coming down on the right side of this argument.


Some Democrats insist that discussing accomplishments is akin to pressuring voters to feel something about the economy that they do not feel, which courts backlash.


But this misses key nuances. Biden can talk about the covid-19 relief bill that passed early last year and drove a surprisingly strong recovery while also stressing our current struggles and how much further we have to go.


Biden should not squander the chance to make an argument that absolutely must be made: Even if inflation has been a worse problem than Democrats anticipated — and even if recovery spending helped drive it — the alternative would likely have been far worse.


Had we not poured money into the economy, we would have experienced an absolute nightmare of suffering, with millions more long-term unemployed, more hunger, more evictions, more failed businesses and a recession whose effects would have lingered far longer than it actually will. But we did.


It can’t be right that Biden must refrain from making this argument. First, it’s the truth. Second, it would pass up a chance to emphasize what Republicans (every one of whom voted against the American Rescue Plan) wanted instead.


As Democratic strategist Simon Rosenberg has argued, the goal should be messaging that speaks to people’s lingering struggles while also telling them how Democrats are well on their way to “leading us to the other side.”


Indeed, polling done by Democrats has found Biden’s approval on the economy in terrible shape, and trust in Republicans is higher. Yet when voters are told various true metrics about the economy, majorities see these as signs of recovery, and larger percentages credit Democrats rather than Republicans for it.


But right now, Republicans couldn’t be happier: All anyone talks about is inflation, they don’t have to come up with any solutions for it, and Biden often seems reluctant to make too strong a case for successes he’s already achieved. If he’s going to change that, Tuesday’s speech is the place to start.

The Lesson From Iraq That Gives Me Hope For Ukraine

The Lesson From Iraq That Gives Me Hope For Ukraine

Jeff Maurer — Read time: 10 minutes


The Lesson From Iraq That Gives Me Hope For Ukraine

It's not the lesson you might think


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It’s hard to describe how badly I want Ukraine to win this war. I’m legitimately moved by the acts of heroism and stirring resilience from many people who hadn’t exactly won the “life on Easy Street” lottery to begin with. I know that some of what I’m reading is probably exaggerated, but if only a fraction of the stories are true, then it’s inspiring. Plus, I’m impressed that, between “Russian warship, go fuck yourself,” and “I need ammunition, not a ride,” one week of actual rebels fighting actual imperial forces has produced more good lines than the last six Star Wars movies combined.


Most analysts agree that — on a basic level — Russia’s invasion is likely to succeed. That is: Russia will probably reach some milestone that will allow them to say “invasion complete”. But then what? Nobody knows. They could install a puppet government, but that government will get bounced like a broke guy at a strip club the minute Russia leaves. They could make Zelensky sign a bullshit “peace agreement”, but that will have as much force of law as a missive from a high school Model UN conference. The “push on to Poland” option seems to literally be running out of gas on Ukrainian highways. What is the plan here? Is there a plan?


It makes sense to assume that Putin has a plan. In the interest of not underestimating your opponent, it’s good to act under the assumption that your adversary is a master strategist playing eight-dimensional chess, and not a glue-sniffing half-wit who currently has both hands stuck inside of pickle jars. But, sometimes, the second thing will be true. And the Iraq War — the most salient lived military conflict for most Americans — provides a vivid example of just how poorly leaders sometimes play their hands.


Americans are well aware of the deeply unfunny comedy that was our invasion of Iraq. Did you know that the invasion happened almost exactly concurrently with the legendarily bad movie The Room? The Iraq War and The Room actually have a lot in common: Both were were jaw-dropping disasters, both lit a gigantic pile of money on fire, and both have been analyzed for nearly two decades by people trying to figure out how anything could go so wrong. Of course, the big difference is that war was not funny at all, while The Room might be the greatest comedy movie of all time. I mean:


The most obvious lesson of Iraq is that invasions are a lot easier than occupations. Anyone who hadn’t learned this lesson from Napoleon’s occupation of Spain, or the French occupation of Algeria, or any of the several-odd-dozen occupations of Afghanistan should have learned it from Iraq. Honestly: You can also learn this from Risk. Any halfwit can take Asia, but holding it is another story. Risk tells us this, an it also tells us that Ukraine is definitely a distinct country, though I’m not sure if that particular finding has any status in international law.



Ukraine — which is larger than China or the United States — is a country in Europe.

But I think there’s another big lesson from Iraq that’s relevant here. Instead of looking at the conflict through American eyes, we should try to see things from Saddam Hussein’s point of view (to my knowledge, this is the only blog arguing people to see things from Saddam Hussein’s point of view). As badly as the war went for the US, it went a million times worse for Saddam Hussein. In an odd bit of self-loathing hubris, we tend to focus exclusively on American agency in the conflict while ignoring the remarkable role Hussein played in his own downfall.


In much of the popular memory — especially among those who are too young to remember the war — Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction program was entirely a figment of George W. Bush’s imagination. And, of course, by the time we invaded, Iraq’s WMD program was not much more than a mayonnaise jar full of change on Saddam Hussein’s nightstand labeled “ANTHRAX FUND”. But that wasn’t always true. Iraq once possessed chemical weapons, and Hussein used them against Iran and the Kurds. Iraq deployed (though didn’t use) biological weapons during the Gulf War, and they continued to pursue them into the mid-’90s. Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction program was basically C&C Music Factory: Defunct by 2003, but a big deal in the early ‘90s.



I ran that one several different ways so feel free to choose whichever option you prefer.

The UN resolution that ended the Gulf War required Iraq to give up its chemical and biological weapons and submit to international inspections. To back up the resolution, the UN continued to enforce the rather-large sanctions package that had been imposed when Hussein invaded Kuwait; the sanctions wouldn’t be lifted until the inspectors completed their work. The sanctions quickly became extremely contentious; Hussein railed against them constantly, and they became a bludgeon used by anyone critical of the West. A highly contentious UNICEF report said the sanctions were responsible for more than 500,000 child deaths; an Irish official who once worked for the UN called them “genocide”. As we assemble the “mother of all sanctions” packages against Russia,1 let’s recall that what would, I suppose, be the “child of all sanctions” packages was thought to be extremely potent. Iraq’s defiance of the UN came at a cost.


Hussein’s refusal to let the United Nations Special Commission inspectors do their work became a perpetual cat-and-mouse game. He would let them work for a while, then declare a site off-limits, kick them out of the country, and then let them back in several months later. In 1998, this escalated to open warfare; the US and the UK bombed Iraq for four days. In addition to harassing the inspectors, Hussein embarked on a campaign of general roguishness (of the unsexy kind) that led to several military responses. In 1993, we struck Iraq with cruise missiles after they tried to assassinate George H.W. Bush. In 1996, another cruise missile strike deterred Hussein from an offensive against the Kurdish town of Arbil. In the late ‘90s and early 2000s, Iraq repeatedly fired on coalition planes tasked with enforcing no-fly zones. Hussein remained the object of Western attention by generally acting like a Batman villain minus the sartorial flair and ease with wordplay.


The fact that Hussein wouldn’t let the inspectors finish their work so that sanctions could end may have ultimately been the single biggest piece of evidence suggesting that he was developing weapons of mass destruction. By the time Colin Powell was at the UN in 2003 holding up vials of white powder and saying “this vial contains ordinary household cocaine but imagine if it held anthrax,” even people who were skeptical of Bush’s claims assumed that Hussein was hiding something. That was certainly my view. Of course, I was a 22 year-old nobody — it would be accurate to call me “not a major player” — and if any CIA officials showed up at the temp job I was working to deliver a high-level intelligence briefing, then I’ve forgotten it. But I know I wasn’t the only person who thought that Hussein’s actions only made sense if he had a weapons program. That circumstantial evidence was a major factor drumming up support for the invasion.


The war, obviously, could not possibly have gone worse for Hussein. He was deposed, captured while hiding in a hole, and photos of him with severe bedhead were broadcast around the world. He was put on trial, convicted, and hanged by his enemies, who taunted him by chanting the name of a rival cleric while he walked to the gallows. From his perspective, this was quite possibly a worse outcome than anything he ever imagined. This wasn’t like going bowling and rolling 20 straight gutter balls; this was like going bowling and somehow ending up on the cover of Time magazine under the heading “The New Face of Premature Ejaculation”. It’s hard to imagine things going much worse than that!


Why did Saddam Hussein play his cards the way he did? That question baffles me to this day. We basically know the answer: He wanted the world — especially Iran — to think that he had WMDs so that he wouldn’t appear weak. That’s what he told the FBI after he was captured. But I’m flummoxed by this rather-straight-forward explanation because it’s such an unbelievable miscalculation. How could Hussein — even post-9/11 when the US had shifted to war footing and was amassing troops in the Persian Gulf — still see Iran as the greater threat? It seems like worrying about melanoma mid-shark attack. But it’s the calculation he made. And any rationalization that can possibly be offered in his defense — such as “Iran was a threat” or “he didn’t think the US was serious” — is countered by the reality that he was deposed, captured, and hanged.


The lesson I take from this is: Leaders sometimes miscalculate in ways that are difficult to fathom. It’s not just that I didn’t think Hussein would make that miscalculation; I didn’t even imagine that it was possible. Sorry to be a back seat Saddam Hussein, but the hazards of his cat-and-mouse game with the UN were so obvious to me, and the first-order costs were so high — the sanctions forbade importing military equipment, which is something you’d want to do if you’re trying to deter Iran — that it honestly never occurred to me that the whole thing might be a gigantic bluff. It’s a level of miscalculation that I can’t begin to comprehend, and I speak as a man who left his job right before a global pandemic and who once owned a Microsoft Zune.


I’m currently wondering how likely it is that Putin has made a Saddam Hussein-level miscalculation in Ukraine. Now, granted: This may just be wishful thinking on my part. I want to see a “Ukraine rebuffs Russia > Putin gets overthrown > China cancels plans to invade Taiwan” triple play so badly that I’m prone to seeing what I want to see in the extremely-patchy evidence. Plus, all of us — including the media — are rooting so hard for Ukraine that “good news for Ukraine” stories travel quickly, while “bad news for Ukraine” stories are about as popular as Alf-themed erotic fiction. I’m aware that my biases might be shading my perception.


But from where I sit, things do not loot good for Russia. As I publish this (late Sunday night), Ukraine still holds Kiev and Kharkov. Military analysts are starting to wonder if Russia might lose the war outright. The world is uniting behind Ukraine in ways that were inconceivable only days ago. The Ruble has dropped 47 percent. The upcoming peace talks seem far more likely to produce capitulation from Russia than from Ukraine. At a minimum, the resolute defense that’s been summoned by brave Ukrainians in the past several days will inspire other Ukrainians in ways that will make any Russian occupation extremely bloody.


I didn’t think the invasion would happen. Last month, I buttressed my credentials as the Detroit Lions of forecasting by saying that I thought Putin was bluffing. I made that prediction because the benefit to Putin of keeping Ukraine within Russia’s “sphere of influence” — whatever that means — seemed miniscule next to the cost of invasion. I was obviously wrong about the invasion, but I have not yet been proved wrong about the cost/benefit tradeoff being way out of whack. If Putin thought that Russia’s “shared history” with Ukraine would cause them to be greeted as liberators (I’ve heard that before!), he was wrong in a way that can’t be expressed in the English language. From Russia’s perspective, the invasion is clearly going somewhere between “not great” and “horribly”. If Putin has a workable plan, I still don’t know what it is. I’m starting to wonder if we might be witnessing one of the greatest own-goals in geopolitical history.


The “dictators get things done” argument has become fashionable in the authoritarian-curious circles of American politics. You hear it non-stop from Trump; Trump has the same amount of love for strongmen that people in the Guy Who Plays Mr. Belvedere Fan Club had for Mr. Belvedere. And, look: Though I am a committed democracy fanboy, I sort of understand the argument. It would be nice to govern without checks and balances. I admit that I have been at public meetings listening to some obnoxious NIMBY tripe and thought: “I’ll bet Robert Mugabe never had to deal with this shit.”


But a person who has the ability to steamroll the opposition to enact a good decision can use that same power to enact a bad decision. And dictatorships might be especially prone to bad decisions; after all, not many people say “gee boss, seems dicey” to a dictator. Those who do tend to have short careers. Not many dictators replicate Lincoln’s “team of rivals” approach; very few are into red teams. A much more typical method was broadcast from Russia on the eve of the invasion: One delusional weirdo with absolute power interacts with terrified stooges whose only role is to validate whatever potentially disastrous decision the Dear Leader pulled out of his ass that morning. In my opinion, that’s a bad way to make decisions.


To be fair to Saddam Hussein (to my knowledge, this is the only blog that strives to be fair to Saddam Hussein), he’s far from the only dictator whose incredibly poor judgement led to his downfall. The same was true of Charles I of England, Charles X of France, and probably many other people named Charles (Charles Manson, Charlie Tuna, etc.). But when I think “incredible miscalculation”, I think of Iraq, because it’s the biggest mistake I’ve ever personally witnessed, non-The Room Division. Though, as I watch what appears to be a five star shit show unfolding in Ukraine, I’m starting to wonder for how much longer that will be true.


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A good neighbor policy for the 21st Century

A good neighbor policy for the 21st Century

Matthew Yglesias — Read time: 9 minutes

The U.S. should prioritize prosperity in Mexico, Central America, and the Caribbean

I wrapped up trips to Maine and Texas with posts offering policy advice to those states, and I had Mexico on the brain while I was in the country last week.


Unfortunately, I don’t understand the domestic political situation in Mexico nearly well enough to grasp what ideas are and aren’t in the realm of plausibility. I also don’t have any good ideas for addressing what seems like Mexico’s biggest problem: the endemically weak state capacity to take on drug cartels.


But I do have advice for the United States of America, which is that we could and should revise our own trade policies to be more favorable to Mexico and the members of the awkwardly named DR-CAFTA group (the Dominican Republic and most of Central America). In negotiating NAFTA and CAFTA, and then especially in revamping NAFTA into USMCA, we’ve consistently acted like the main point of negotiating trade deals is to help American exporters, using the lure of access to the American domestic market to try to bully smaller countries into taking more American agricultural exports or adopting our intellectual property rules.


That’s all very shortsighted. The main point of forming a regional trade bloc with our Latin American neighbors should be to turn these basically friendly, basically democratic states into rich and successful friendly democracies. We should be building an awesome club that other countries like Jamaica want to join. We should be pwning Cuba by creating many, many nearby economic success stories that leave them in the dust. And we should be countering the China-Russia axis with as many democratic success stories as we can. Especially because what happens in Mexico and Central America directly affects Americans even more than what happens in Ukraine or Taiwan.


Reassessing our policy toward our neighbors should start with re-considering what the 1990s free trade consensus got wrong, but also what it got right.


Trade is good, China is bad

Both NAFTA and the Permanent Normal Trade Relations with China were products of the bipartisan pro-trade consensus of the 1990s, which did get something really badly wrong: the idea that economic integration would promote political liberalization in China.


When Bill Clinton signed the bill establishing PNTR, then-Speaker Dennis Hastert remarked that the arrangement wasn’t just about dollars and cents. “Know what? We open it up so that we can exchange ideas and values and culture,” Hastert said. “And that's an important thing.”


Clinton agreed at length in his remarks:


Of course, opening trade with China will not, in and of itself, lead China to make all the choices we believe it should. But clearly, the more China opens it markets, the more it unleashes the power of economic freedom, the more likely it will be to more fully liberate the human potential of its people. As tariffs fall, competition will rise, speeding the demise of huge state enterprises. Private firms will take their place, and reduce the role of government in people's daily lives. Open markets will accelerate the information revolution in China, giving more people more access to more sources of knowledge. That will strengthen those in China who fight for decent labor standards, a cleaner environment, human rights and the rule of law.


This was really wrong.


It’s tough to argue that Chinese economic development was bad per se since it lifted so many people out of poverty. But the idea that it would promote political reform was not just overstated, but directionally wrong in a discrediting way. Again, it’s hard to regret Chinese economic development. But it’s easy to say that, to the extent the United States could have instead directed that development toward countries like Mexico, Honduras, and Guatemala, it would have been better.


This brings us back to what the free traders got right.


It is good, economically speaking, to outsource low-productivity work to poorer, lower-wage countries. That lets your country get more and cheaper stuff and also allows you to reallocate your own labor supply toward other more pressing needs. The moderately bad macroeconomic management of 2001-2007 followed by the catastrophically bad macroeconomic management of 2008-2018 managed to disguise this by keeping the labor market in a state of near-constant recession or quasi-recession. But today’s fully stimulated economy reminds us that in a properly managed economy, “jobs” are not the scarce commodity; actual goods and services are. Trade relationships let poor countries get richer by importing capital and know-how, and they let rich countries get richer by reducing supply-side constraints.


In other words, there’s nothing wrong with trade. But there’s plenty wrong with a situation in which China is growing so much faster than friendlier, more democratic countries that also struggle with poverty and underdevelopment.



While there is obviously trade between the United States and Latin America, Perot’s “giant sucking sound” pulling jobs south didn’t materialize on the scale he imagined, in part because the jobs went to Asia instead.


China competes with other exporters

The PRC has made a lot of investment in strategic economic sectors where we compete with them more or less directly. And in those high-end sectors — airplanes, software, AI, next-generation energy, etc. — we ought to be competing. We are a rich country and we want to be at the economic frontier.


But China also exports a ton of textiles to the United States.



This is not really an area where we can or should be looking to compete. Apparel manufacturing is a poor country’s game.


But China is competing with other countries to serve the American market. Mexico makes textiles, too, but their textile exports to the U.S. are dwarfed by China’s. Half or more of the Mexican labor force is in informal jobs, so while Mexico is a much smaller country than China, they are certainly not out of potential garment factory workers.



Guatemala is the kind of very poor country that should be champing at the bit to get on the industrialization ladder with a garment industry. But their textiles industry is tiny, with exports roughly equal to their banana industry.



We should be making it as easy as possible for our friends and neighbors to be the ones who capture these jobs. But instead, we’re monkeying around with the interest group politics of the American yarn industry.


“Yarn forward” is backward priorities

The point of forging free trade agreements with friendly nearby countries should be to give those countries priority access to the American market — an express lane that advantages them vis-à-vis China. And under NAFTA, apparel made in any member country was supposed to get tariff-free access to any other country.


But this was made more complicated with a bunch of rule of origin provisions that were tightened up in drafting USMCA. As the law firm Arent Fox explains, it’s not good enough for the t-shirt to have been made in a Mexican factory; they need to be made of North American yarn, which in turn needs to have been made of North American cotton:


The USMCA textile and apparel rules of origin are generally based on the “yarn forward” rule, which requires the formation of the yarn (spinning or extruding) and all processes following yarn formation to occur in the USMCA territory. Yarn itself is generally subject to a “fiber-forward” rule which means that the fiber must originate in a USMCA country and all processes are required to produce the yarn after that, e.g. extruding or spinning and any final processing must occur in the USMCA territory.


The yarn forward concept was originally pioneered in DR-CAFTA and it applies there, too. The rule has two impacts relative to simple free trade:


We get less apparel made by our regional partners and more made in China.


A larger share of that smaller pie is successfully captured by American cotton growers.


This is obviously not even close to being the worst set of priorities that cotton interests have imposed on the American government over the course of their sordid history, but it’s still really dumb. Promoting Latin American industrialization has wide-ranging benefits for geopolitics, for managing migration, and for helping America’s advanced industries find customers in a less poor hemisphere. Promoting cotton farming accomplishes nothing. These are classic, seasonal, low-paid “jobs Americans won’t do,” so we get H2A guest workers instead. There’s nothing wrong with that (it’s a great example of the economic benefits of immigration), but if foreign demand for U.S.-grown cotton diminished somewhat, that’s also fine.


But America’s policy toward countries that we supposedly have free trade with is full of this kind of weird bug. We’re driving ourselves crazy trying to stop poor Central Americans from migrating here in search of work, but we’re also blocking them from selling us sugar, which might give them more jobs at home.


Just be helpful

The old joke “poor Mexico, so far from God, so close to the U.S.” exemplifies Mexico’s weak negotiating position in any kind of dealmaking with the United States of America.


And Mexico has its own share of self-driven problems. But the situation genuinely calls for some enlightened self-interest on the part of the United States and recognition that it would sincerely be really good for the United States if Mexico and its neighbors were enjoying more rapid economic growth. They ought to kick all the lobbyists out of the room at the U.S. Trade Representative’s office and try to make every provision of USMCA and DR-CAFTA as friendly to Latin American exporters as possible. If those countries want to open their markets in ways that American companies want, that’s great. They should do that. America is home to a lot of great companies. But the trade relationship should not be about the United States serving as muscle for our exporters — it should be about opening our markets wide open so that our neighbors have maximum ability to outcompete China for market share and grow.


And I would apply that same dictum to other areas. AMLO appears to be pursuing the very eccentric goal of halting crude oil exports in hopes of making Mexico self-sufficient in gasoline, rather than continuing with the current practice where Mexican crude is shipped to Asian refiners and Mexican gas stations import refined gasoline from the United States.


I have no idea why he thinks this is a good idea, but one challenge facing Pemex (the Mexican state-owned oil company) seems to be significant management problems at their existing refineries. If we have any smart people that we can send down to help out, we should. Mexico is very sunny, which is why I was there on vacation, but which also means we should be encouraging technology transfer to spur their solar industry.


The world of trade agreements is full of tedious details like the country of origin rules for fiber. The U.S. approach to the region tends to oscillate between Trump-style open bullying to try to crack down on migration and the Obama/Biden approach of talking a lot about root causes. But aid checks as a bribe to externalize immigration enforcement, while probably better than other available short-term alternatives, don’t actually address root causes. What would address them is genuinely prioritizing economic development, not in the sense of telling other countries what we think they should do (be less corrupt! make good decisions about everything!), but in the sense of tackling things that are genuinely under our control. That means opening our markets to as many exports as possible to give Mexico and our other neighbors the best possible chance of finding their own way to prosperity.


More growth and industrialization in this part of the world is one of the biggest possible geopolitical wins for the United States, and our top priority in every regional decision should be an honest effort to be a good neighbor promoting development rather than a petty bully.

Marjorie Taylor Greene wants to be judged by her own words? Challenge accepted.

Marjorie Taylor Greene wants to be judged by her own words? Challenge accepted.

Catherine Rampell — Read time: 4 minutes


Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) doesn’t want to be held accountable for the white supremacists she pals around with. Judge her instead by her own words, she pleads.


Sure thing, congresswoman. Challenge accepted.


On Friday, Greene spoke at the America First Political Action Conference, a white-nationalist rival to the much larger Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) she addressed across town in Orlando the next day. Her fellow Republicans Rep. Paul A. Gosar (Ariz.), Idaho Lt. Gov. Janice McGeachin and Arizona state Sen. Wendy Rogers, among others, participated in the “groyper” gathering as well.


Not long ago, appearing in such company would have been anathema for elected officials.


To understand why, consider some of the remarks uttered by the event’s organizer, Nicholas Fuentes, an unabashed antisemite previously expelled from CPAC. The FBI has referred to him in court documents as a white supremacist.


Minutes before Greene addressed the crowd, Fuentes crowed that “our secret sauce here, it’s these young White men.” He declared that the Jan. 6 insurrection was “awesome.” He solicited a “round of applause for Russia,” to which the crowd chanted “Putin! Putin!” And he seemed to suggest that attempts to compare Russian President Vladimir Putin to Hitler are flattering.


And that was just at this event.


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Fuentes’s reputation and comments can be found with a quick Google search. But when criticized for appearing at his event, alongside other speakers mocking “QueerPAC” next door, Greene pleaded ignorance.


“I do not know Nick Fuentes,” Greene told reporters the following day, despite video and photos of their appearance together. “I’ve never heard him speak. I’ve never seen a video. I don’t know what his views are, so I’m not aligned with anything that may be controversial.”


She then tweeted several defenses of her participation. She acknowledged that some speakers offered “a few off-color remarks” (an inventive euphemism, apparently, for “openly bigoted”). But she defiantly proclaimed, “I am not going to play the guilt by association game in which you demand every conservative should justify anything ever said by anyone they’ve ever shared a room with.” She added: “I’m only responsible for what I say.”


Well, we at least agree on that last part. Greene should be held responsible for what she says, at a neo-Nazi confab or elsewhere.


For instance, Greene should be held accountable for continuing to compare every Democratic policy she opposes — whether mask mandates, vaccination requirements or Jan. 6 responses — to the Holocaust. This includes her more colorful misfires on the subject, such as when she denounced Democratic colleagues investigating Jan. 6 as the “gazpacho police.” (Perhaps she fears the gazpacho police will send innocent patriots to the goulash for their attempted soup d’état.)


She has shared other antisemitic garbage over the years.


These include claims about Jewish space lasers supposedly sparking California wildfires. And how “Zionist supremacists” are conspiring to replace the West’s White Christian population with non-White Muslim immigrants, an endorsement of the “Great Replacement” theory that was also voiced by other speakers in Orlando.


Add to the list her remarks that Muslims do not belong in government. Her claim that 9/11 was an inside job, with no plane ever crashing into the Pentagon. Her assertion that the shooting massacres in Newtown, Conn., Las Vegas and Parkland, Fla., were all staged.


And that leading Democratic officials should be executed. And so on.


Over the weekend, former secretary of state Mike Pompeo condemned Greene for “playing footsie” with “anti-Semitic neo-Nazis.” But given Greene’s record, it might be more accurate to say the neo-Nazis wish to play footsie with her, perhaps in hopes that she can lend their once-shunned organization political legitimacy.


One might be tempted to forgive Greene for not realizing how embarrassed she should be to “share a room with” these speakers and pro-Putin attendees. After all, it’s usually Greene who’s the most embarrassing person to share a room with. When Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) was asked Sunday what he thought of Greene’s (and Gosar’s) participation at a white-nationalist event, he replied: “I don’t know them, but I’m reminded of that old line from the ‘Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid’ movie, where one character says: ‘Morons. I have got morons on my team.’”


Greene, like Gosar, has already been stripped of her committee assignments for comments endorsing conspiracy theories and encouraging violence against fellow lawmakers. She has been denounced by some of the few Republicans who still have principles. She has even been disavowed by her gym!


Yet the House has so far refused to expel this tinfoil-hat-wearer from its ranks, an action that would require a two-thirds vote of her peers.


Most Republicans, it seems, would prefer to keep the morons on their team.