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Ukraine invasion: No checks and balances to prevent Putin from war

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It may not be the first time a big power has launched an unprovoked attack on false pretenses. But as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine grinds into its second week, many members of President Vladimir Putin’s policy elite are feeling blindsided. Mr. Putin appears to have consulted almost no one before veering into the uncharted territory of war and isolation. And they are asking how Russia’s government system, which has some constitutional checks and balances, got to this point, even in a country with a 1,000-year history of highly centralized autocracy. 

In 2002-03, by contrast, the George W. Bush administration spent months trying to convince the world that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction before invading that country. When the USSR went into Afghanistan in 1979, a collective leadership composed of powerful players in the Politburo made the call.

Why We Wrote This

Vladimir Putin appears to have acted without consulting others in launching Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Long-standing assumptions and historical grievances contributed over years to that development.

Numerous factors may be at play: Mr. Putin’s long tenure; conflict with the West, especially after a pro-Western street revolt in Kyiv and the 2014 annexation of Crimea; and the isolation of the pandemic.

In addition, says Gleb Pavlovsky, a former Putin adviser-turned-critic, Ukraine showed Mr. Putin believes Russia was deceived about the West’s intentions to expand NATO, and he became certain that Western leaders were planning to use Ukraine as a launching pad for attacking Russia.

Moscow

As the invasion of Ukraine grinds into its second week, many in Russia’s political and foreign-policy elites are scratching their heads over why President Vladimir Putin suddenly decided to abandon a tough diplomatic poker game with the West over NATO expansion – in which he held many cards – and veer into the uncharted territory of war and national isolation.

It may not be the first time a big power has launched an unprovoked attack on another country on false pretenses. But it’s remarkable that Mr. Putin appears to have consulted with almost no one before taking that fateful decision, leaving much of his own policy elite feeling blindsided. And how Russia’s government system, which does have at least some constitutional checks and balances, got to this point, where it appears to have failed so profoundly, is a question that some Russian political experts, particularly opposition-minded ones, are already asking out loud as they try to assess what happened along the way.

Russia has been a highly centralized and militarized autocracy for 1,000 years, and has long sought to protect itself by acquiring territory to serve as a buffer between itself and its outside enemies. But there were always controls, in the form of a czarist dynasty with a traditional aristocracy, or a Communist Party with a collegial Politburo, to moderate the behavior of the person at the top. The system created by Mr. Putin seems to have no effective counterbalances or moderating forces to his decision-making.

Why We Wrote This

Vladimir Putin appears to have acted without consulting others in launching Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Long-standing assumptions and historical grievances contributed over years to that development.

Afghanistan and Iraq

That contrasts with more recent examples. In 2002-03, the George W. Bush administration spent months trying to convince the world that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction before invading that country. When the USSR went into Afghanistan in 1979, a collective leadership composed of powerful players in the Politburo made the call.

But when Mr. Putin announced his rationale for war on Feb. 24, he did so with a long, rambling speech that followed a clearly stage-managed meeting of his Security Council. During it, he badgered and scolded members of that powerful body as if they were schoolchildren.

President Vladimir Putin (left) chairs a Security Council meeting in the Kremlin in Moscow, Feb. 21, 2022. Three days later, in a long, rambling speech, he announced his rationale for war.

Some say Mr. Putin’s singlehanded grip over the government was inevitable from the time he came to power pledging to restore the “power vertical” after the 1990s, when Russia’s global standing and economy foundered. Others blame conflict with the West, which became intense after a pro-Western street revolt in Kyiv and Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014, leading to a creeping militarization of Russian politics. They add that Mr. Putin’s isolation was deeply exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic and his own apparent fear of contagion, sharply limiting his contacts with anyone beyond his close inner circle. 

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