.....It's a time to be smarter than, not tougher with, President Putin and Russia
The world is abuzz again today with the escalating situation in Ukraine, and here in America so much of that ado is about getting “tougher” with Russian President Putin.
American President Obama initially got tough with recently-fled Ukraine President Viktor Yanukovych and his government recently, telling them not to open fire on its own citizens protesting against it or there would be serious “consequences” from America. Still, Yanukovych rebuffed Obama's tough talk, and scores and scores of protesters were shot and killed by his government forces, among whom snipers proved particularly deadly. The American “consequences” resulting from ignoring President Obama's order from half a world away? Нічого . Nothing.
Why?
Because short of outright, immediate and at least equal military counteraction, there is no practical serious consequence any totally outside observer could have caused.
As smart as President Obama is claimed to be by many, he should have known that natural fact best of all. But it was his counterpart in Russia who proved the truth of it this time by immediately – and overwhelmingly – applying the consequence of military force to the revolting situation. President Putin did not warningly orate as his counterpart did, he simply took the most formidable action available to him at the time: total, tyrannical force. Putin has been, so far into the present Ukrainian drama and particularly all the way up to Russia's ignition of its military muscle in Crimea, the softest speaker of the two Presidents and the one using the bigger stick.
The damaging result of President Obama talking so tough when there's no way in Kiev (or Damascus) he held any serious intention of actually walking the talk required to produce any on-the-ground effect on such a grave situation as Kiev is inevitable: you are seen as weaker, not stronger – exactly opposite of the outcome the President was aiming for. And when an opponent understands your pattern of doing just that and is himself fully intent on employing the overwhelming military force necessary to cause his preferred outcome, you will, almost without exception, lose the consequence battle.
It should seem to a logical thinker that not saying anything at all is much, much more advantageous than continually talking tough and losing again and again and again, but President Obama, and many others, obviously still mean to stick to their cap guns and keep on losing with their tough talk strategy.
The President continues that failed strategy regarding Ukraine, but now it's even more insane: his “consequences” threat(s) proving totally impotent in stopping the former Ukrainian government from killing its own citizens, the President now takes his little stick to President Putin, warning this time that there will be serious “consequences” if Russia doesn't halt its military movement inside Ukrainian borders. Indeed, President Obama is so serious now, evidently, that rather than backing up his talk with an opposing force which is either equal to or greater than the force Putin has already employed and is still deploying, he has sent Secretary of State John Kerry to take back Crimea instead.
And, while the Executive branch continues to bristle like an albino peacock, it seems like many in the Legislative branch are just as eager to wallow along with their own impotent tough talk.
In a recent New York Times piece titled, “Obama pushed to get tougher on Russia,” Senator Graham of South Carolina is quoted as urging, “Create a democratic noose around Putin's Russia.” “Revisit the missile shield,” suggests Senator Rubio of Florida. Representative Rodgers of Michigan argues, “Cancel Sochi,” while Senator Durbin of Illinois says, “Kick 'him out of the G-8' altogether.'
Now, let's be clear: the fact that President Obama hasn't used his constitutional right as Commander-in-Chief of the still-mightiest military on the planet to directly counter Russia's military move in Ukraine is definitely a smart one. Not only because this situation does not meet the constitutional mandate of immediate threat and national interest, but also because the American people as a majority may finally have realized that military might – no matter the theoretical cause – ain't hardly ever right. And that's a beautiful thing.
After decades and decades of militarily talking and walking tough, killing thousands of innocents and destroying megatons of property in the process while seemingly never truly accomplishing so many so-called missions, Americans as a whole seem to be done with that particularly shameful period in their history (Let us pray).
Americans were decades ahead of their government on another shameful episode of their history – slavery – and it's about time America's federal government smartens-up and syncs itself to the will of its People once more.
Again: the natural, thus unavoidable disabler of all tough talk comes from the result of not backing it up, the consequence of that inaction is that the tough talker is considered weaker, not stronger – the exact opposite intent of tough talk in the first place. Understanding that truth, acknowledging it and still desirous of leading in a world where might is right is still the native language in so many places, the only options left seem to be that one must either walk one's talk or not talk at all.
Some Americans seem to click the don't talk at all option with their views that America shouldn't do anything about what's currently happening in Ukraine; many of these same Americans view every other conflict going on now in the world through those same isolationist, rose-colored, keep our noses out of it lens. These Americans don't want to talk about the world's problems, they don't want to walk with the world's problems, they don't want anything to do with the world's problems, let alone even imagine leading the world in addressing its problems.
But in a world history so far recorded as a global march toward individual inclusion for all, these Americans are outcasts living in a fantasy of their very own making, the option of don't talk at all only exists in their utopia, not the world reality lives in.
Thus with silence dismissed, and in a world whose very nature constantly starves for just and righteous leadership, the only option left to leaders dedicated to truth is clear: one must always walk like they talk.
Yet, when most enjoying this ideological trip reach this conclusive point, common human nature has a tendency to uproot those who do not truly possess the natural essence of leadership, and they automatically fall back to either might is right (the more affected of the pretenders) or talk harshly and carry a small stick (the passive-aggressive types). But, this is also the point when true leaders separate themselves from that chaff and march forward, leading most of us into a better future for all of us.
If one realizes the only positive way forward is to talk like one walks and walk like one talks, and that might ain't right in almost every situation, what exactly is a true leader to do in such an alarming situation as Ukraine has currently become, a situation that can turn even more explosive with any daft move?
The key to walking one's talk, even in the midst of as mighty a military offensive as the one President Putin now engages in, is not to walk as tough or tougher than Putin, but to simply walk smarter than Putin.
Americans genetically carry one of the most powerfully smart political tool kits nature provides humanity; civil disobedience, nullification, and protestation included inside. Indeed, America's very creation owes itself to employing those mighty tools to defeat at least as formidable force then as Russia is to Ukraine today (relatively speaking, of course). Verily, Ukraine itself brought their own box of those same smart tools to rid themselves just again of corrupt, oppressive government.
It is smart to stand with Ukrainians in pursuit of individual liberty, as America led by President Obama is doing. It is not smart for President Obama to threaten “consequences” America no longer has the moral will to produce. Once more: America's “tough” these last decades – no matter how deadly and devastating – has utterly failed to cause changes to better the world.
Now, more than ever, it's time for America to walk softly and carry a smart stick. Practically, that means stop talking publicly how “tough” the “consequences” are going to be and simply act decisively and quickly with the smartest tools at your disposal.
The smart stick should've been pulled out on Putin over his recent staged image-piece, the Sochi Olympics; America should have led the world in refusing to participate in such an oppressive government's political Games. Even so, President Obama and America have a grand opportunity now to take the higher, smarter route over Putin's old-school tough road. As Putin continues to strike in several ways to cripple Ukraine's government, let us give him a bigger taste of smarter medicine.
President Obama should immediately issue an executive order banning all American trade with the Russian Federation, and the freezing of assets, wherever the USA may, of all Russian citizens with a particularly sharp eye out to isolate the global spending power of Russia's politicians and most rich. The order should also freeze all current negotiations with Russia – with the exception of any negotiations which may result in the immediate and direct effect of President Putin withdrawing every single soldier he's inserted into Ukraine in the last week, with the remaining Russian troops who've traditionally been stationed in Crimea on Russian military installations to be confined to their bases until order is restored in Ukraine. If Putin does not agree to those conditions first, the total American ban and freeze continues.
I understand that's not a big enough stick for some Americans, but there is no more righteous stick we can wield at this time. It will immediately get the world's attention, no doubt lead other nations to follow, and most importantly, we walk American talk until Russia concedes.
Let's not talk tough any more, let's use our smarts this time instead.