Tomorrow is Holodomor Remembrance Day, commemorating the 1932-1933 Soviet-instigated famine in Ukraine. One neednât be Ukrainian or in Ukraine to mark the occasion and consider the history. Here in Washington, DC, for instance, there is a Holodomor Memorial, a thirty-foot wedge of bronze just north of the Capitol that depicts a field of Ukrainian wheat disappearing into nothingness.
This bas-relief of disappearing Ukrainian land feels eerily timely, with news today that the United States is pressuring Ukraine to accept a plan that would see it cede territory (among other concessions) to Russia, potentially in exchange for peace. But is peace really on the table?
With so many questions, we turned to former US Ambassador to Ukraine John Herbst for answers. Looking at the twenty-eight-point draft plan, Herbst sees some promise, but he also notes that it appears to give Russia territory it has so far been unable to conquer. âThis would seem to be a fatuous idea, rewarding the aggressor,â he tells us. The former US ambassador continues:
âThereâs clearly a play led by [Russian envoy Kirill] Dmitriev, because of his special relationship with [US envoy Steve] Witkoff, to get a deal that hands over to Russia hard-to-conquer territory in western Donbas, and improves relations between Trump and Putin. From Dmitrievâs perspective, the goal is to create conditions that allow Putin to gobble up more of Ukraineâeighteen months, twenty-four months down the road, or maybe right after Trump leaves office. Thatâs the game.â
Though Trump said today that Ukraine has until Thanksgiving to take the deal, Herbst does not think thatâs a hard deadline:
âIt is also true that despite the Kremlinâs rejection of Trumpâs cease-fire proposal in August, Trump ignored his own deadline for Russian compliance. There is no reason to assume that the president would severely sanction Ukraine for not quickly accepting a document that appears to have many Kremlin-friendly points.â
So, what advice would Herbst give the US president at this moment?
âYou have to choose whatâs more important: a friendly relationship with an aggressorâwhose policies are, in fact, adversarial to the United Statesâor a durable peace. The only way you get [a durable peace] is to make it unpleasant for Putin to continue his war of aggression.â
Your AC Intel starts thereâwith more of our late-breaking conversation with Herbst.