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Ukraine’s Offensive Could Set Stage for Diplomacy With Russia, U.S. Officials Say

Ukraine’s Offensive Could Set Stage for Diplomacy With Russia, U.S. Officials Say
Ukraine’s Offensive Could Set Stage for Diplomacy With Russia, U.S. Officials Say


Ukraine’s planned counteroffensive against Russia has overshadowed talk of a potential negotiated settlement in the conflict, but some U.S. and European officials say the next phase of the war could create momentum for diplomacy.

It is unclear how the officials will define success in the counteroffensive, which could last many months, or how its outcome might affect their approach. Opinions range widely among military strategists about whether Ukraine is likely to regain territory after more than a year of war.

For now, President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia has shown no signs of wanting to make concessions or engage in meaningful dialogue.

And U.S. officials remain wary of any calls for an immediate cease-fire or peace talks, especially those coming from China. Beijing persists at trying to play peacemaker, despite its obvious strategic alignment with Russia. Foreign Minister Qin Gang has been traveling across Europe this week to try to sell the notion that China can shepherd negotiations.

Some European officials meeting with Mr. Qin have expressed skepticism. And in Washington, Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken met with his counterparts from Britain and Spain this week to shore up commitments to military aid to Ukraine, sending a message that battlefield gains are the priority.

Mr. Blinken said on Tuesday at a news conference with James Cleverly, the British foreign secretary, that the Ukrainians have “what they need to continue to be successful in regaining territory that was seized by force by Russia over the last 14 months.”

Like Mr. Blinken, Mr. Cleverly did not mention diplomacy with Russia at all, instead focusing on military aid: “We need to continue to support them, irrespective of whether this forthcoming offensive generates huge gains on the battlefield, because until this conflict is resolved and resolved properly, it is not over.”

Ukrainian leaders also say they will not agree to talks until they have pushed back Russian forces.

Still, President Biden’s aides have been exploring potential endgames, trying to identify an outcome that could be acceptable to both Kyiv and Moscow if real peace talks started, U.S. officials say.

“I know that senior-level administration officials are regularly having conversations about what peace ultimately would look like with our Ukrainian counterparts,” said Representative Adam Smith of Washington, the top Democrat on the Armed Services Committee, “while at the same time having conversations about how to arm them and win back as much territory as possible.”

Mr. Biden’s aides and European officials say their best hope is for Ukraine to make substantial gains during the counteroffensive, which would give it more leverage in any negotiations.

But whatever its leaders may think, American officials say that most Ukrainians have little appetite for compromise with their Russian attackers.

And U.S. officials fear that even if Russia’s military suffers more setbacks this summer, Mr. Putin may still believe he can win a war of attrition.

Avril D. Haines, the director of national intelligence, said in congressional testimony last week that while Mr. Putin was “scaling back his near-term ambitions” in Ukraine, the chance of Russian concessions at any negotiating table this year “will be low.”

Another senior U.S. official said that no matter what success Ukraine achieves, the Russian leader could simply order a wider draft mobilization to rebuild some of his military power.

Mr. Putin could also benefit as the 2024 presidential campaign gears up in the United States, with former President Donald J. Trump the early Republican front-runner. Mr. Trump and several Republican politicians have called U.S. support for Ukraine wasteful and dangerous.

China has pushed for a mediator role since it unveiled a vague peace initiative in February. Though Mr. Blinken and some top European diplomats say they are open to the possibility of China playing a helpful role in the future, they criticize Beijing for not publicly recognizing Russia as the aggressor in the war. They insist that a country unwilling to do that cannot be trusted to be a dispassionate mediator.

Xi Jinping, China’s leader, made a state visit to Moscow in March and voiced continued support for his nation’s partnership with Russia, which the two governments said had “no limits” just before Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022. China’s special envoy for its peace initiative, Li Hui, was the ambassador to Russia for 10 years and received a medal from Mr. Putin.

U.S. and European officials are also suspicious of calls for peace talks that do not include a demand that the Russian military first withdraw from Ukrainian territory, which is the position of President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine. China has not taken an explicit position on Ukraine’s territorial integrity, and U.S. officials say China and Russia might use the pretense of talks to freeze the front lines — and Russian gains.

In her congressional testimony, Ms. Haines said Mr. Putin could use a cease-fire to try to regain strength while “buying time for what he hopes will be an erosion of Western support for Ukraine.”

She added that “he may be willing to claim at least a temporary victory based on roughly the territory he has occupied.”

Mr. Blinken recently said it was “a positive thing” that Mr. Xi had finally spoken to Mr. Zelensky last month, but he was “still not sure” China was willing to accept that Ukraine was the victim. Annalena Baerbock, the German foreign minister, said nearly the same thing directly to Mr. Qin at a news conference on Tuesday: “Neutrality means taking the side of the aggressor, and that is why our guiding principle is to make it clear that we are on the side of the victim.”

The main argument for a greater Chinese role in diplomacy is the fact that the country is Russia’s most powerful partner, and Mr. Xi and Mr. Putin share a personal bond. Russia’s war has roiled the global economy, creating problems for China.

“As a matter of principle,” Mr. Blinken said, “countries — particularly countries with significant influence like China — if they’re willing to play a positive role in trying to bring peace, that would be a good thing.”

The White House said on Thursday that Jake Sullivan, the national security adviser, talked about Ukraine with Wang Yi, China’s top foreign policy official, during a two-day meeting this week in Vienna.

The debate in Washington over potential peace talks is amorphous and paradoxical. There are even competing arguments based on the same hypothetical outcome: If Ukraine makes substantial gains, that might mean it is time for talks, some officials say — or it could mean Ukraine should put diplomacy on the back burner and keep fighting.

If Ukraine is unable to seize significant territory, some U.S. and European officials might want to nudge Mr. Zelensky toward a negotiated settlement.

“The dynamic will shift even if Ukraine makes marginal gains,” said Mr. Smith, the Democratic lawmaker. After several more months of war, he predicted, both sides will be exhausted.

But some officials and analysts in Washington caution against such thinking.

“There’s always been a desire among some people in Washington to say, look, if Ukraine doesn’t make gains — or if they do — it might be time to have a conversation about Ukraine looking for a settlement,” said Alina Polyakova, the president of the Center for European Policy Analysis.

“I personally find that shocking,” she added. “Territorial concessions would validate Russia’s aggression, which sets a global precedent for China and others that such means work. Two, it would also mean that the West would have to accept the moral implications — accepting war crimes and condoning continued human rights abuses.”

Among top U.S. officials, Gen. Mark A. Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, has been the most outspoken on the need for Ukraine and Russia to consider negotiations, arguing that a prolonged war would result in many more casualties. Mr. Blinken has taken a different position. “There has to be some profound change in Mr. Putin’s mind and in Russia’s mind to engage in meaningful diplomacy,” he said last week.

The secretary of state and other American officials have made vague statements on what they see as a viable end to the conflict.

At least twice in the past several months, Mr. Blinken has referred to the need for Ukraine to reclaim territory “seized by force by Russia over the last 14 months,” as he put it on Tuesday. But this war is a continuation of an earlier one: Starting in 2014, Russia seized effective control of hundreds of square miles of eastern Ukraine and annexed its Crimean Peninsula.

It is unclear whether Mr. Blinken is intentionally drawing a distinction between those swaths of territory. Ukrainian leaders insist their goal is to reclaim every inch of their land taken since 2014, including Crimea. But many U.S. officials and analysts believe that Mr. Putin would take more drastic measures to retain his grip on the peninsula.

Some U.S. officials have raised the possibility of at least forcing Russia to demilitarize Crimea, so that it cannot be used as a staging ground for future attacks on Ukraine. But that outcome could be almost as difficult for Mr. Putin to accept. The Russian Black Sea Fleet is based at the Crimean city of Sevastopol.

Mr. Blinken said last week that a “just and durable” peace plan “can’t ratify what Russia has done, which is the seizure of so much of Ukraine’s territory.” Nor can it allow Russia to “simply rest, refit and reattack six months later or a year later.”

Julian E. Barnes contributed reporting from Washington, and Steven Erlanger from Brussels.

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