Will Trump Chan­nel Nixon in Ukraine?

Will Trump Channel Nixon in Ukraine?

Will Trump Chan­nel Nixon in Ukraine?

There are indi­ca­tions that the pres­i­dent-elect may intend fur­ther esca­la­tion.

Portrait of Richard Nixon

(Bettmann / Contributor/Getty Images)

The sim­i­lar­i­ties between this most recent pres­i­den­tial elec­tion and that of 1968 are sev­er­al. Like Joseph R. Biden, Lyn­don B. John­son was an increas­ing­ly polar­iz­ing and unpop­u­lar wartime pres­i­dent who declined to run for re-elec­tion. Their respec­tive vice pres­i­dents were each hob­bled by their records and paid the price at the polls in Novem­ber. The Repub­li­can can­di­dates in both ’68 and ’24 were, each in their own ways, the authors of their own polit­i­cal res­ur­rec­tions. And dur­ing the cam­paign, both Richard M. Nixon and Don­ald J. Trump claimed to pos­sess plans to end the increas­ing­ly unpop­u­lar wars of their pre­de­ces­sors.

Upon win­ning the New Hamp­shire pri­ma­ry in March 1968, Nixon promised “to end the war and win the peace in the Pacif­ic.” Still more, in a series of pri­vate meet­ings with edi­tors and reporters, Nixon claimed that once he was in office he would con­vene a sum­mit with Sovi­et lead­ers to get their assis­tance to help end the war. As the Chris­t­ian Sci­ence Mon­i­tors long­time Wash­ing­ton bureau chief, God­frey Sper­ling, recalled,

it was from these “off the record” brief­in­gs that a sto­ry began to cir­cu­late among those who want­ed the U.S. out of the war: that Nixon had a “secret plan” to bring the boys home. He doubt­less was able to win some dove votes from those who felt Humphrey had been too close­ly tied to Pres­i­dent Johnson’s accel­er­a­tion of the war.

Of course, Nixon had no such plan. Instead, he increased the inten­si­ty of bomb­ing over North Viet­nam and expand­ed the war to Cam­bo­dia. 

As with Nixon, Trump’s cam­paign pledge to end the Ukraine con­flict “in 24 hours” prob­a­bly attract­ed dovish vot­ers. And there are sev­er­al indi­ca­tions he may fol­low in the foot­steps of Nixon by esca­lat­ing the war in an attempt to end it.

Trump’s appoint­ment of the retired Lt. Gen. Kei­th Kel­logg as his Ukraine envoy is one such indi­ca­tion. Kel­logg, a long­time Trump advis­er and the co-chair of Amer­i­ca First Pol­i­cy Institute’s (AFPI) Cen­ter for Amer­i­can Secu­ri­ty, seems to see the war in Ukraine through the same lens the Biden admin­is­tra­tion views it. Writ­ing in the once-respect­ed Nation­al Inter­est in Octo­ber, Kel­logg claimed, “Rus­sia has invad­ed Ukraine for a sec­ond time with the goal of end­ing its sov­er­eign exis­tence.” (The goal was to pre­vent Ukraine from join­ing NATO, but nev­er mind.) And Kellogg’s pro­fessed vision of a post-war set­tle­ment seems more in sync with the demands of the max­i­mal­ists in Kiev than with any­thing remote­ly achiev­able at this point in the con­flict. Writ­ing, again, in the Nation­al Inter­est, Kel­logg pro­posed that

a cease­fire along the cur­rent lines and sub­se­quent nego­ti­a­tions would pre­serve a sov­er­eign, demo­c­ra­t­ic Ukraine anchored in the West and capa­ble of defend­ing itself. Kyiv would main­tain its inter­na­tion­al­ly-rec­og­nized claims to sov­er­eign­ty over all of Ukraine. A halt to hos­til­i­ties would also facil­i­tate the pro­vi­sion of reli­able secu­ri­ty guar­an­tees, includ­ing pos­si­ble NATO and EU mem­ber­ship, to deter Rus­sia from resum­ing the con­flict.

If he hasn’t yet, Kel­logg ought to be informed that Ukraine’s mem­ber­ship in NATO was the war’s casus bel­li, and as such, hold­ing out any pos­si­bil­i­ty of Ukrainian’s mem­ber­ship in the future will be a non-starter for Moscow. 

In an April 2024 research report for AFPI, Kel­logg and his col­league Fred Fleitz wrote that in order to end the war, Trump “would con­tin­ue to arm Ukraine and strength­en its defens­es to ensure Rus­sia will make no fur­ther advances and will not attack again after a cease-fire or peace agree­ment.”

In addi­tion to call­ing for (yet anoth­er) bilat­er­al defense agree­ment with Ukraine, Kel­logg and Fleitz also called for “plac­ing levies on Russ­ian ener­gy sales to pay for Ukrain­ian recon­struc­tion.” 

Do such pro­pos­als seem more like­ly or less like­ly to draw Putin to the nego­ti­at­ing table?

That Kel­logg was appoint­ed to such a sen­si­tive posi­tion in the first place should wor­ry those who sup­port­ed Trump on the assump­tion that he would bring much need­ed change to the con­duct of US for­eign pol­i­cy. Rea­son­able peo­ple might ask: Where are men of expe­ri­ence and imag­i­na­tion, like the retired Colonel Dou­glas Mac­gre­gor, senior fel­low at The Amer­i­can Con­ser­v­a­tive? Unlike Mac­gre­gor, Kel­logg knows noth­ing about Rus­sia or its inter­ests, let alone its his­toric sen­si­tiv­i­ty to Ukraine’s strate­gic impor­tance. Mac­gre­gor has decades of schol­ar­ship invest­ed in Rus­so-Ger­man rela­tions and Moscow’s role in Europe and Asia. But Mac­gre­gor is nowhere to be found among the incom­ing team. Per­haps Howard Lut­tnick and Lin­da MacMa­hon were too busy cam­paign­ing for cab­i­net appoint­ments to do what they should have been doing: select­ing the most com­pe­tent men and women for the most sen­si­tive posi­tions.

Alas, we will have to leave for anoth­er time the ques­tion of why the pres­i­dent-elect has staffed his nation­al secu­ri­ty team with a ver­i­ta­ble ros­ter of Fox News per­son­al­i­ties and a recent immi­grant with sus­pect­ed ties to for­eign intel­li­gence such as Sebas­t­ian Gor­ka. The British-Hun­gar­i­an Gor­ka has claimed that Trump will “force” Putin to the nego­ti­at­ing table by threat­en­ing a mas­sive increase in mil­i­tary aid to Ukraine. Faux-machis­mo aside, there is lit­tle to indi­cate that—even if Trump pur­sues such a plan—there is much left to pro­vide. Indeed, there is lit­tle evi­dence Putin is like­ly to be swayed by induce­ments from Wash­ing­ton. 

With regard to Ukraine, the play­book of the bipar­ti­san Wash­ing­ton blob still rules. And while it has only been a month since the elec­tion, the pres­i­dent-elect has pro­vid­ed few signs that he plans on devi­at­ing from the script left by Joe Biden and Jake Sul­li­van.

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