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Protecting Ukraine’s future security

On Sept. 30, U.S. national security adviser Jake Sullivan deflected Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s request for accelerated admission to NATO – for a “different time” – and said the best way to help Ukraine was through “practical on-the-ground support.” With tangible Western backing, Ukraine has gained battlefield momentum. This support may remain vital.

Zelensky has repeatedly called for security “guarantees” for Ukraine. Elaborating his vision, a new report Zelensky chief of staff Andrii Yermak and former NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen proposes a Kyiv Security Compact. Itcalls for Western partners to offer “legally binding” guarantees. But such a NATO-likeguarantee – “an armed attack against one … shall be considered an attack against all” – is improbable. The 1960 U.S.-Japan Security Treaty is the last comparable guarantee the U.S. has extended. No ally has endorsed Zelensky’s call. 

Two other security relationships may have relevance for Ukraine. As part of its “ironclad commitment” to the security of Israel, the U.S. helps it maintain a qualitative military edge over neighboring militaries. The U.S. assists Taiwan, a “key U.S. partner” in the Indo-Pacific to maintain “sufficient self-defense capability.” Although some degree of ambiguity might exist, the U.S. is politically committed to help defend Taiwan and Israel. This could involve direct intervention.

With both countries, the U.S. conducts high-end joint exercises, including with major warships and combat aircraft. But in neither does the U.S. have a military base or station substantial combat forces. Israel flies the U.S. F-35 combat aircraft, but Taiwan does not. Recently, Washington signaled Beijing by sailing two U.S. warships through the Strait between Taiwan and China.

Consistent with Sullivan’s emphasis on practical support, the proposed compact states that Ukraine’s “strongest security guarantee … is the capacity to defend itself.” It sensibly urges Western training, joint exercises, and provision of advanced defenses. They may remain a foundation of the Western partnership. So, too, may intelligence sharing. It has shown its worth in assisting Ukrainian forces to protect Kyiv at the outset of the war and to plan recent counter-offensives.

Ukraine may already have much of the best the West can offer. Partner armies have helped Ukraine reform, grow, train and equip its forces. Tens of thousands of its military personnel have benefitted. Training in decentralized command and control, maintenance and logistics, and operation of Western arms has become a battlefield multiplier.

Since 2014, the U.S. has committed $19 billion in security assistance to Ukraine, including over 1,400 Stinger anti-aircraft and 8,500 Javelin anti-armor missile systems, and tube and HIMARS rocket artillery. This year alone, Poland, the UK and Canada each have donated military aid valued at $1-2 billion.

More Western arms may go to Ukraine as its former Soviet weapons are depleted or destroyed. In July, U.S. Air Force Chief of Staff General C.Q. Brown said Western combat aircraft (he cited U.S., Gripen, Eurofighter or Rafale) “could go to Ukraine.” Skilled Ukrainian engineers have mated U.S. anti-radar HARM missiles to MiG-29s and might mount advanced air-to-air missiles.

The proposed compact calls for investment in Ukraine’s defense industrial base. It has capability. The Neptune missile sank Russia’s Black Sea flagship, the Moskva. A stronger industry could maintain and repair Western arms. Antonov Aircraft, a storied state enterprise, is long in decline. Ukraine might privatize it and other firms and seek defense innovation in the vibrant private sector.

Readiness could be vital. Within a week of the outbreak of war, Russian forces seized the Kherson region. Now at high cost, Ukraine is waging a grinding counter-offensive to retake land in which Russian troops are dug in. The West might assist Ukraine by improving readiness.

Western support for Ukraine’s future security could depend in part on how the war ends and the extent to which Moscow remains threatening. For at least some time Ukraine may have to prepare for the worst. It can better protect its security through robust, tangible security ties with the West. Striving too hard for impractical guarantees could be a distraction. Even if Ukraine were to join NATO, tangible security cooperation could be crucial.

William Courtney is an adjunct senior fellow at the nonprofit, nonpartisan RAND Corporation and was U.S. ambassador to Kazakhstan, Georgia, and the U.S.-Soviet Commission which implemented the Threshold Test Ban Treaty.