Russia’s war on Ukraine enters its third year. Ukraine’s counteroffensive, launched last spring, was a failure, and Russian troops are gaining ground in the Donbas region. What to do?
Here’s an idea. Let’s slap new sanctions on the Russians—that’ll teach those Slavic thugs not to mess with Ukraine. But if these sanctions are such a good idea, why weren’t they implemented in 2022, right after Russia invaded Ukraine? Why wait two years?
Are any American and Nato sanctions working? The Obama administration and other NATO countries implemented sanctions against Russia in 2014, right after Russia annexed Crimea. A year later, NATO claimed the sanctions were effective. NATO was wrong, however, because eight
years after swallowing Crimea, Russia invaded Ukraine.
As John Paul Jones once said, “I have not yet
begun to fight.” Now, President Biden is letting the world know he’s friggin' serious.
Maybe his 600 new sanctions will get Russia to back off and get the hell out of
Ukraine.
Or maybe not. The Guardian reported recently that
the Russian economy grew by 3 percent last year despite the grinding war with Ukraine. On
the other hand, Germany, one of Ukraine’s most important allies, saw its economy shrink over the same period.
We’ll see how things work out. If Russia and
Ukraine are fighting a year from now, maybe the United States can find even
more sanctions to impose on those pesky Slavic invaders. Of course, what
Ukraine really needs right now is ammunition, not sanctions. And if the war drags on, Ukraine will probably need more ammunition next year than it needs now.