My Kyiv Post | Opinion Exclusive: “Reflections on Scholz’s Leopards’ Stalling Strategy”

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz looks on prior to deliver a speech at the Congress centre during the World Economic Forum (WEF) annual meeting in Davos on January 18, 2023. Fabrice COFFRINI / AFP

26 January 2023.

LINK to read at Kyiv Post

Summary (Added only on blog, T.O’D.): Scholz’s resistance to sending Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine has freed up many in Germany and beyond with reservations about the direction of the West’s strategy to become vocal.

Scholz is opposed to the recently changed USA-NATO strategic understanding that Putin’s new, long-war-of-attrition strategy could give sufficient time for his larger economic and energy war on Europe to bear fruit, seriously disrupting the West’s solidarity with Ukraine.

Biden and the NATO majority concluded that Putin’s long war of attrition strategy must be smashed. This requires large numbers of heavy weapons – tanks, aircraft, etc. – for Ukraine.

However, Scholz’ faction in Germany and in other EU states see a stalemate (e.g., war of attrition)) as likely positive, as it might lead in time to the two sides accepting a negotiated settlement or frozen conflict. This, they feel, is the path to ending the dangerous Russian-EU energy and economic war.

However, the majority pro-escalation camp, expects that a war of attrition (aka stalemate) risks the destabilizing effects of a prolonged and costly economic-and-energy “Cold War. 2” on Western stability and solidarity.

Scholz’, by demonstrably stalling NATO’s ability to send German tanks, effectively signaled his leadership of the no-escalation and pro-stalemate EU-wide faction, which is of significant size. In Germany sections of every political party now align with Scholz’ strategy. He and his faction wait for their time, when and if the new NATO escalation strategy fails.

All German parties were deeply involved in the previous energy partnership with Moscow; there is no significant organized opposition faction able to take leadership from Scholz and implement a Zeitenwende. This vacuum drives a gathering German – and EU – political crisis

Moscow is well aware of these matters. (Kyiv Post Opinion piece follows)

LINK to read at Kyiv Post | Link to copy at GlobalBarrel.com

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s resistance to sending Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine has freed up many in Germany with deep reservations about the direction of the West’s strategy and policy, to voice their frustrations, fears and, for many, an unwillingness to join in a Russian-Ukraine war, as opposed to containing it.

These are not think-tankers in Berlin, or the German liberal press – who are generally appalled at Scholz’ stonewalling, as are some members of the Bundestag, mainly from the opposition CDU, but also some from the Greens and liberal Free Democrat parties that partner with Scholz’ SPD in the governing coalition.

However, Scholz’ policy has broad support. A poll last week found some 43% of the public do not want to send Leopards, with 11% undecided. [Tagesschau].

Among the business class, it is clear his policy finds support not only from long-time pro-Russian elements, but also many who have expressed deep anger at Merkel, Scholz and other politicians who championed over-dependence on Russian energy, rendering the country vulnerable to Putin’s blackmail.

Soo too, in political and ministerial elites, Scholz’ withholding of Leopards resonates with broad sections of not only his own center-left SPD, and both the overtly Russian friendly far-left and far-right parties, but significant sections of all others, for a variety of reasons, whether Greens, Liberals or center-right CDU/CSU.

Even among elites with sympathy for Ukraine, many insist that the U.S. also bears much responsibility for this conflict and quickly point to a problematic history of U.S. wars in the Middle East.

For whatever reasons, these groups viscerally resonate with Scholz’s concern that the Biden administration’s demand for NATO allies to send heavy battle tanks is an “escalation” that risks a wider war and closes the possibility of a negotiating process anytime soon. They will remind that NATO escalation is something Biden himself has always said needs to be avoided.

Be that as it may, the Biden administration – and most of NATO – have recently concluded that NATO indeed now needs to escalate. This is driven by an assessment that Putin can and will fight a long war if his forces are not soon hit very hard. Not only would the war of attrition Moscow is adopting to cause long misery for Ukraine, it would also heavily burden the economies and energy security of both Western allies’ and developing states.

What is currently underway, as a Russian second front in support of its war inside Ukraine, is not a normal larger “cold war” aimed at western allies, but a costly, high stakes conflict featuring Russian weaponization of energy and other vital commodities answered by western sanctions, huge state subsidies to affected businesses and citizens, complex interventions in markets and other countermeasures clearly fraught with risks.  

The Russian aim on this second front is to inflict burdens that gradually accumulate during a long war of attrition within Ukraine, burdens that Moscow hopes will set EU states against one another, and so too, within these states, create hardships that boost especially far-right populist forces, all-in-all undermining Western military and financial support for Ukraine.

Put simply, the USA leadership apparently feels that, to undermine this Putin second-front strategy which depends on a prolonged war, even if it be a costly “quagmire”, require heavy weapons such as Leopards – a sharp escalation – enabling Ukraine’s armed forces to deliver stinging defeats to Russian forces.

This escalation is the new U.S. strategy now embraced by most NATO allies. I agree with this strategy. If I indeed understand this properly, it flows from sober assessments.

But here in Germany as well as in much of Europe, the populations have not been prepared for these new war aims by their leaders.

It’s not clear how long ago the Biden Administration arrived at this analysis and strategic shift. In any case, Biden et al has won over its NATO partners, but this will clearly require Germany too.

From well before 24 February 2022, the Biden administration’s constant preoccupation has been how to keep the coalition united. One American “unilateral” misstep and not only many Germans but many other Europeans will be reminded how Bush and the neocons dragged “old Europe” into Iraq. People tend to forget that Bush was actually just about to win formal UN authorization; but instead, he and the UK’s Blair, raced to invade Iraq without Europe and without UN endorsement because unilateral action was “simpler.” And besides, who needed “old Europe” and UN bureaucratic constraints anyway?

Then the war turned out not to be so simple; it became a costly blunder, deeply affecting the entire Western alliance and Europe’s energy security.

In stark contrast, Biden and his administration have handled this coalition building exceptionally well, providing reliable and deliberate assessments, and engage in respectful consensus building – a Biden hallmark from his long Senate career and Foreign Affairs Committee experience.

Nevertheless, Scholz insists he will not be, in his view, Biden’s front man on sending heavy tanks and escalating this conflict.  He refuses to be the Americans’ “viceroy” in Europe for an escalation that he and many others in Germany – and elsewhere in Europe – see as either a pernicious US-driven adventure or, (among the merely naïve and understandably frightened) as a risky escalation.

Scholz’s de facto constituency across Germany and elsewhere shares his fears that this can go very badly. They feel that if the war is now becoming a “quagmire” – a battle where neither side can gain – then that this is actually a fortuitous development, as this means each side might abandon ideas of any victory and a negotiated end and compromises should be possible after some months.

Scholz is de facto claiming political leadership of this coalescing and self-consciously pro-containment and pro-negotiations, or perhaps, if needs be, a “frozen conflict” camp. 

So, he insists Biden send USA heavy tanks first. That way, Biden will have at least taken political responsibility, and clearly not Scholz.

The cogent arguments of the U.S. administration and Pentagon regarding why it would be a logistics fiasco to send Abrams tanks to Ukraine are, of course, well understood in Berlin. But these points are irrelevant, what Scholz is primarily looking for political cover to avoid a backlash if things go badly and the war spills over somehow. At best, he may “lead from behind” once again as he Merkel attempted to do to finish Nord Stream 2 pipeline in the face of fierce opposition from both DC and most EU allies.

Scholz is the anthesis of a Churchillian leader who awakens the masses of ordinary citizens and drags unwilling elites to see the exigencies of the situation, and ascend collectively to their “finest hour.”

No, Scholz is a Chamberlainian to the core.

What is most unfortunate is that there is simply no German Churchill waiting in the wings. Virtually the entire political class and vast sections of business elites banked on Russian reasonableness toward Germany and the EU generally whatever conflicts may come in Ukraine, Georgia, Belarus and elsewhere.  This was epitomized in the years-long Nord Stream 1 & 2 confrontations – and now again, in rejecting German Leopard 2 tanks for any Ukrainian counter-offensive.

The political crisis festering here in Berlin, and thereby in the transatlantic alliance supporting Ukraine, is that although there is growing impatience among many Germans with the strategic postures epitomized by Merkel and Scholz, there is simply no opposition party or significant opposition faction that presents an organized alternative capable of replacing the old leaders who engineered the earlier energy partnership with Russia, and who avoided seriously ostracizing Russia for its 2014 annexations and war. 

In one way or another all major parties were deeply complicit in this geostrategy not to mention the extreme left and right parties. And as the support for Scholz stalling on Leopards now shows, many elites still embrace this posture.

So, the Chamberlainians must continue in power, responsible for Berlin’s role in the national and European resistance to Putinism. They are supremely ill suited. There is still no real “Zeitenwende” underway in Germany, contrary to what Scholz claimed in a recent Foreign Affairs essay.  Instead, by blocking Leopards to Ukraine, Scholz is positioning himself as the leader of a coalescing trend that sees a war stalemate, even a quagmire, as an opportunity for a negotiated settlement with Putinism.

Moscow is, of course, well aware.

: My Kyiv Post | Opinion Exclusive: “Reflections on Scholz’s Leopards’ Stalling Strategy”

Recommended further reading:

Expert comment Scholz will bow to pressure to send tanks to Ukraine By John Lough, Associate Fellow, Russia and Eurasia Programme, Chatham House

The Story Behind the Fraught Decision to Send All Those Tanks to Ukraine By FRED KAPLANJAN 25, 2023
The Clash Over Whether to Send German Tanks to Ukraine Is a Pretty Big Deal
By FRED KAPLAN

An example of the point of view Scholz represents:

Bloomberg Opinion: The West Is Getting in Too Deep in Ukraine By Pankaj Mishra, January 30, 2023
The drive to defeat Vladimir Putin is taking on a dangerous and heedless momentum all its own, just like Iraq.
​Also read as a video.

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.