Wed. Apr 24th, 2024

Prof. ST Hsieh

Director, US-China Energy Industry Forum

626-376-7460

[email protected]

February 17, 2022

The Ukraine crisis has been with us almost one year, much of the “warnings” included in the following article are old news by now. The fact is “it takes two to tangle!” It is not that Putin gets the spotlight alone, but Biden too. Further, Ukraine Crisis is only the surface. In fact, it is Russia and the US jostling in Europe for the international order the U.S. spent decades constructing and defending. Why would the whole world feel the impact? Russia and China are moving closer as the Ukraine crisis gets underway. As a result, “The crisis has been a massive drain on the attention of an administration that had intended to focus on competition with China, and is arguably Biden’s second major foreign policy crisis after the chaotic exit from Afghanistan.”

It should be pointed out that the Ukraine Crisis started in March 2021 and US exit from Afghanistan was August 2021. Among the five permanent representative nations at the UN Security Council, only China is not directly involved in the Ukraine Crisis. Why is China featured an import role in a basically European crisis?

  1. Biden’s foreign policy is focused on Indo Pacific for countering China’s future rise.
  2. China-Taiwan relation is somewhat like the Russia-Ukraine relation. The US is heavily engaged, but after Biden announced that no US troops absolutely will enter and defend Ukraine against Russia, the Taiwan Strait tension cools down quite a bit. Taiwan realizes that the Rock-Solid support promised by the Biden Administration also does not include any US military support in case of a war.
  3. Fundamentally, it is major test of US-Russia relation. Both Biden and Putin share the global stage right now. War or peace will depend on both men, it is not just Putin’s call.

If Putin invades Ukraine, the whole world will feel it

Dave Lawler Wed, February 16, 2022, 2:30 AM, AXIOS

A war in Ukraine — even a short one, even with no U.S. troops on the ground — would ripple throughout the global economy and challenge the international order the U.S. spent decades constructing and defending.

Why it matters: Every time Vladimir Putin provides the slightest hint of his intentions toward Ukraine, markets move and heads of state scramble. An invasion could have enormous implications for the U.S.

The latest: Russia said Wednesday it is returning more troops and weapons to bases, but the claims have still not been verified by the U.S.

  • President Biden warned Tuesday that the threat remains urgent: “This is about more than just Russia and Ukraine.”

Global markets have been battered by the warnings of war, and they rose on Tuesday after Putin said he’d give diplomacy another chance.

  • Russia is a major exporter of oil and other commodities, and Biden warned that an invasion could lead to higher energy prices. The fear of war has already driven average U.S. gasoline prices close to $4 per gallon for the first time in nearly 14 years, Axios’ Nathan Bomey writes.
  • Russia is also Europe’s primary source of natural gas, and countries like Germany fear a spike in already high prices in the event of war, possibly as retaliation for western sanctions.
  • The U.S. and its allies have promised “unprecedented” sanctions if Putin does invade. Those could restrict access to key technologies and make Russia even more economically reliant on China.

The Chinese government will be closely watching the West’s response to the situation in Ukraine and the implications for China’s own threat to bring Taiwan under its control by force.

  • The White House has warned that an invasion could begin even before the Winter Olympics conclude, despite speculation that Putin wouldn’t want to jeopardize his increasingly close relationship with Beijing.

Between the lines: Biden’s speech on Tuesday was in part a call to arms to defend the international rules of the road, which were largely authored from Washington and are increasingly challenged by Moscow and Beijing.

  • The crisis has been a massive drain on the attention of an administration that had intended to focus on competition with China, and is arguably Biden’s second major foreign policy crisis after the chaotic exit from Afghanistan.

What they’re saying: Putin claims Russians and Ukrainians are “one people.” He has defended Russia’s right to a sphere of influence, with Ukraine — with its deep historical and cultural links to Russia — at its heart.

  • A full-scale war would be a hazardous endeavor for Russia, though its military capabilities far outstrip Ukraine’s. The cultural ties also cut both ways, notes Alexander Baunov of Carnegie Moscow. “You cannot invade Ukraine without hurting the relatives of your own citizens.”
  • Ukraine’s government, meanwhile, is contending with the threat of an invasion that could threaten the country’s very existence, while trying to tamp down panic that is already wreaking havoc on the Ukrainian economy.

What to watch: Putin seems to be relishing his place at the top of Biden’s agenda, and a chance to flex Russia’s revived superpower status. His next moves will reverberate far beyond Ukraine.

By user

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.