Decades after US President Joe Biden disappears as a footnote to a turbulent chapter of American political history, his authorization of the use of US-supplied ATACMS tactical ballistic missiles for strikes inside Russia will remain a mystery.
First, the timing. Biden waited till November 6. He had a Plan A in case Kamala Harris won and a Plan B in the scenario of a Donald Trump presidency.
Biden has initiated Plan B, which dares Russian President Vladimir Putin to respond with nuclear retaliation.
Biden sees it as a win-win. If Putin acts as promised, a nuclear confrontation ensues, which would disrupt Trump's hopes to normalize the Russian-American relationship. But if Putin doesn't react, Moscow's nuclear deterrence increasingly looks like a bluff and the Ukraine war gets 'Trump-proofed' till 2028.
Indeed, if Trump confronts Biden now, he risks resuscitating the moribund 'Russia collusion' hypothesis that hobbled his first term. So, Trump plans to get away to his new golf course in Scotland.
Biden's villainous plot may look smart. But that's only as smart as his original plan that Western sanctions would ruin the Russian economy. In October, the IMF ranked Russia as the fourth largest economy after the US, China and India based on purchasing power parity, the most accurate measuring scale for GDP, surpassing Japan.
The Russian economy's upgrade in recent years, overtaking European competitors one after another - the UK, France, Germany and Japan - was driven by Western sanctions, which compelled Putin to implement aggressive import substitution and establish domestic production.
Russian people rallied behind Putin, which created political space to wage a prolonged attritional war, whereas Biden kept measuring the success of the proxy war with near-term territorial objectives.
This story is from the November 22, 2024 edition of The Morning Standard.
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This story is from the November 22, 2024 edition of The Morning Standard.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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