mdwest
AH ambassador
I read the Brookings article and there are a lot of problems with that one, in my humble opinion.
The title is What Are the West's Strategic Goals in the Ukraine War? One might expect that the author answers this question. One soon realizes that he is confused on the mater, not only as the world turns and different realities will emerge, but also at any given snapshot in the war's history. War is good we can make sense of it later.
1) The question on the table was US objectives. This is an article about the West. No doubt there is an overlap, but they are not the same as US objectives. He goes on to point out how The West went ahead without involving the UN, or large areas of the globe in The South. He advances a global search for legitimacy and meaning.
2) What is the West in these divided times and do all those players have the same objectives, if they did it might not be necessary to blow up their gas lines, though come to think of it, that might indicate they were on the same page to the degree they had foreknowledge.
3) "At the beginning of the war, the Western allies emphasized that defending the United Nations Charter and democracy were their primary objectives." This is a switch from the overthrow of an earlier Ukrainian democratic administration. These are obviously laughable goals, nothing could be further from their minds. But it also raises another mater, on language. He doesn't say these are the goals, he merely says they put emphasis on these goals. Elsewhere he speaks of narratives (story telling); "overall settlements" of a specious variety that would require a victory well beyond the Ukraine; One gets that "some U.S. strategists and officials advocated", well after things were underway, for certain strategic goals.; Then he seems to have his own pet projects he would like to fit into the picture.
4) One needs a lexicon for terms so that they current meanings can be understood. "Does the West... envisage a “victory” in Ukraine that lays the foundations for a world in which democracy is more secure and global governance more inclusive and effective?" Democracy and more inclusive global governance are pretty much opposites. They are like two locomotives that may be traveling to the same destination, but not in the same direction... When one sees a litany that includes democracy and global administration, you can be sure that democracy is the part they are not praying for.
5) It is an odd article that celebrates the role the Soviets played in alleviating colonialism's effects, while bemoaning that the bribes to 3rd world dictators have as yet not been paid. But you can see the connection. China and Russian do not want to be part of a global system of administration that is being organized outside their borders, and that is why it is worth isolating them when possible. I think you can generally bet safely on BIG. There is likely to be a global administrative system of government. People today do not want it. Getting there will require a great deal of corruption. It is going to happen. When some of the smartest people in the world can't seem to make themselves understood, there is normally a reason.
Wouldnt disagree with your assessment on most items at all..
Brookings tries very hard to be a-political (although I see them as a left leaning group personally) and usually attempts to appear to be pursuing neutral, politically disinterested ground...
The point in presenting a brookings article alongside a hoover article (clearly a right leaning group) was to demonstrate the consistencies (there are obviously some inconsistencies as well) between both left and right thinkers on the strategic value in assisting the Ukranians in their effort to defeat the Russians..
There is very little the left and right agree on in this country anymore.. Ukraine however seems to have the majority of the country in agreement.. with the extreme right really being the only folks with a position of extreme dissent..