Consider This from NPR - Three years into his war on Ukraine, what does Putin really want?

Episode Date: June 1, 2025

President Trump wants to make a deal with Vladimir Putin to end the war in Ukraine. Putin says Russia wants to engage in peace talks, but Putin has also been ordering the most widespread and violent a...erial attacks on Ukraine in years. This has led Trump to criticize Putin more and more in public — a step that's been rare over the course of Trump's two terms in office.Three years into his war on Ukraine, what does Putin really want? It's a question leaders around the world are trying to figure out.To learn more, NPR's Scott Detrow speaks with Angela Stent, Professor Emeritus at Georgetown University, Senior Fellow at the Brookings institution — a nonpartisan policy organization in Washington DC — and author of the book "Putin's World: Russia Against the West and With the Rest. For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.Email us at considerthis@npr.org.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 What a difference a week can make. One week, President Trump is feeling good about a ceasefire in Ukraine. It's a terrible situation going on over there. 5,000 young people every single week are being killed. So hopefully we did something. Then? We're going to find out whether or not he's tapping us along or not. And if he is, we'll respond a little bit differently.
Starting point is 00:00:23 Those comments came amid Russia's massive aerial attacks on Ukraine, the largest since the start of the war. At least 12 people were killed and dozens more injured. And President Trump, who has long championed his relationship with Putin, has made it clear he is not pleased. I'm not happy with what Putin's doing. He's killing a lot of people and I don't know what the hell happened to Putin. I've known him a long time, always gotten along with him.
Starting point is 00:00:47 But he's sending rockets into cities and killing people. And I don't like it at all. The Kremlin has proposed a second round of ceasefire talks in Istanbul, but some experts don't believe Putin is serious. It doesn't strike me as genuine. William Taylor was the ambassador to Ukraine under Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama.
Starting point is 00:01:07 He spoke to Michelle Martin on Morning Edition this past week. If President Trump allows President Putin to outplay him, to continue to step him along, as President Trump has said, and if President Putin kind of wins this game that he seems to be playing, stringing him along, then that will be a major defeat for the United States, a major defeat for international security, but a major defeat for President Trump.
Starting point is 00:01:31 Consider this. President Trump wants to make a deal with Vladimir Putin. Other Western powers want to rally around Ukraine. Three years into this war on Ukraine, what does Putin want? From NPR, I'm Scott Detro. I'm Tanya Mosley, co-host of Fresh Air. At a time of sound bites and short attention spans, our show is all about the deep dive.
Starting point is 00:02:01 We do long-form interviews with people behind the best in film, books, TV, music, and journalism. Hear our guests open up about their process and their lives in ways you've never heard before. Listen to the Fresh Air podcast from NPR and WHYY. On the Indicator from Planet Money podcast, we're here to help you make sense of the economic news from Trump's tariffs. It's called in game theory a trigger strategy, or sometimes called grim trigger, which sort of has a cowboy-esque ring to it. To what exactly a sovereign wealth fund is. For insight every weekday, listen to NPR's The Indicator from Planet Money. It's Consider This from NPR. What does Russian President Vladimir Putin want? It is a question leaders around the world are trying to figure out. He's talking to President Donald Trump about peace talks, but also ordering the most widespread and violent aerial attacks
Starting point is 00:03:05 against Ukraine in years. That and other things have led Trump to criticize Putin more and more in public, a step that has been rare over the course of Trump's two terms in office. To sort this out ahead of the latest round of potential peace talks, we called up an expert, Angela Stent. She studied Putin and Russia extensively. She's a professor emeritus at Georgetown University and author of the book, Putin's World, Russia Against the West and With the Rest.
Starting point is 00:03:29 Welcome back. Thank you. Good to be on your show. Let's go back to 2014 here at first and that initial invasion of Crimea. What were Vladimir Putin's goals then and how have they changed over the years? So his goals then were certainly to take back Crimea. He claimed it was because he was concerned about, quote unquote, NATO ships appearing in Crimea.
Starting point is 00:03:52 Even though NATO in 2008 had said that one day Ukraine would join, it had made absolutely no progress in doing that. So it was to take over Crimea and then destabilize Ukraine. And then, of course, we get the full scale invasion in February of 2022. And as that war has continued and become this strange mix of an old fashioned trench war and a futuristic drone war, we are continuing to try to figure out what Putin wants out of this.
Starting point is 00:04:22 What do you think here in 2025 he's after? Is this all about NATO and NATO borders? No, that's just a subterfuge. I mean, he didn't object to NATO enlargement when it happened in 2004. He doesn't like NATO because if Ukraine were in NATO, Russia couldn't control it. And he wants to be able to control and absorb Ukraine.
Starting point is 00:04:43 So what he's after is he still thinks he can win the war. He wants a Ukraine that's smaller, that's weaker, that's demilitarized, that will have to promise never to join NATO, and he wants regime change. He wants President Zelensky to go and they would prefer to have someone in power in Kiev that's more pro-Russian. But given what's happened in Ukraine in the last three years, that's going to be impossible to find. So when he is insisting that as part of any agreement, Ukraine does not join NATO at any
Starting point is 00:05:16 point ever, that that's walled off forever, that's more about Ukraine than NATO to you? It's much more about Ukraine. But of course, we know now that Trump administration has said they will not agree to Ukraine joining NATO as long as they're in office. And the next US administration may say no, too. But the idea that in 2025, you can say that Ukraine will forever be neutral, I mean, that's not very real.
Starting point is 00:05:41 This may be true for a number of years, but not in perpetuity, if NATO still exists. I mean, it seems like you're kind of dismissing a lot of the things that Putin at least, again, says and says is different than actual view. He wants out of this war, despite President Trump's scolding on social media in recent weeks, he still seems to by and large support a lot of Russia's end goals suddenly. What is the strongest card that Ukraine has at this point, or is Russia in a position to really dictate the end game of this war at this point?
Starting point is 00:06:11 Well, it's not that it's not in a position to dictate the end game, but Ukraine is in a weaker position in as much as the United States is now not supporting Ukraine as the previous administration did. But the Europeans are stepping up. I mean, it'll take a lot more, but they do support Ukraine. And they believe that if Russia wins this war, then Europe itself will be threatened and the likelihood of a wider war is there. So I think that's what they're trying to do. And you said in the beginning, this is on the one hand, very old fashioned trench warfare, but it's also very 21st century electronic warfare, cyber warfare,
Starting point is 00:06:46 things like that. And the Ukrainians are getting pretty good. They're building their own drones. They're getting help with electronic warfare. So they may going forward be able to push the Russians back more than they are at the moment. What do you think Putin wants out of the United States? So there are two sets of negotiations going on.
Starting point is 00:07:04 What Putin wants from the United States is the bilateral reset. I mean, President Trump has offered him something that no US president really, since the collapse of the Soviet Union has, they all tried resets, but they failed. But President Trump is saying we can have a fantastic economic relationship, we can end your isolation from the West, you can come back to all of these global fora, and we will lift the sanctions. So those are the things that Putin wants. And I think he still believes he may be able to get this without making any real concessions
Starting point is 00:07:35 on the Ukraine War, but stringing this along and having perpetual negotiations. There will be some more negotiations on Monday. Let's see what happens there. The Russians have been very evasive about what it is They're going to present but that's what he wants He wants the reestablishment of US-Russian relations in a way that they haven't been since the 90s and stringing along or as Trump Memorably put it on social media tapping him along does that benefit Russia at this point to you? So I think the Russians are a little perplexed now social media tapping him along. Does that benefit Russia at this point to you? So I think the Russians are a little perplexed now because if you look at some of the sort
Starting point is 00:08:09 of propagandists in the media, they're now criticizing President Trump for being emotional, for being volatile and things like that. So they're concerned about what's happening. And that's why they keep dangling things like, okay, let's sit down and negotiate to prevent him from in fact either imposing sanctions and there's a very tough sanctions bill in Congress. Senator Graham and Senator Blumenthal were in Kiev on Friday, promising that, you know, if Russia didn't improve its conduct in these negotiations, that sanctions bill would be imposed. They don't want that sanctions bill. So they're trying to prevent that. We've talked about sanctions a few times. What's the best way to think about sanctions
Starting point is 00:08:54 from your point of view? Have they worked? Have they weakened Russia? Because this is what three years in of sanctions and the war is continuing at the same pace it always has. Well, they certainly haven't worked if they were supposed to change Putin's calculus. They have imposed costs on the Russian economy, but actually the most severe costs are happening now with low oil prices. And if the low oil prices continue and Russia's major revenue is from the sale of hydrocarbons, that would be much more serious. The problem is that there's been huge sanctions evasion.
Starting point is 00:09:26 So part of this Senate bill that might be passed next week, it's veto proof, I think it has 81 members supporting it, would be to punish countries that are still trading and buying Russian oil and to punish the people who helped the sanctions evasion. But that's all, it's very tricky. And that's the reason really why they haven't worked the way they were supposed to, is because so many countries are helping Russia evade them. And do you think an extended round like we're talking about,
Starting point is 00:09:54 do you think that would change it? Or do you think it's still there's a cost, but there's a workaround? I mean, I think it would impose more costs on Russia, but I'm not sure that it would persuade Putin that he has to end the war. What would persuade him much more would be if the Trump administration were willing to give more support, financial support to Ukraine and to sell it the weapons it desperately
Starting point is 00:10:15 needs, like the Patriot batteries for their air defense. If Russia really thought that it was being challenged more on the battlefield, I think that could change Putin's calculus. So that's what matters from the US much more than whatever Trump posts. I think so. Yeah, that would be yeah. I mean, whatever he posts, and of course, he's criticized Putin. But if there's no action, it doesn't really have any consequences. Like you said, peace talks are allegedly supposed to resume in Istanbul this upcoming week. Whether it's this round or the next round, what are the big questions you have? What will you be looking
Starting point is 00:10:49 for to get a sense of whether Russia is serious in any way about these talks? Well, I'd be looking at what are the Russian demands? Are they changing or are they still the maximum demands? They were supposed to present their memorandum of terms before the meeting. That hasn't happened. The Ukrainians, in fact, have presented theirs. So it's whether Russia is willing to make any modification to its maximum demands. And then, of course, whether the Ukrainians are willing to do that too, because obviously they've rejected most of what Russia has suggested.
Starting point is 00:11:22 Although it's quite possible that Ukraine might accept some kind of a territorial compromise for the moment, but as long as they can continue to control those areas in the four so-called annexed territories that Ukraine in fact still controls. Matthew Feeney From the American point of view, many presidents have tried wildly different approaches with Vladimir Putin over the last two decades. None of them seem to have really worked.
Starting point is 00:11:48 Why do you think it's been so hard for any American president to reign in Vladimir Putin? Because what Putin wants is a recognition by the United States that Russia has a right to a sphere of influence, both in the post-Soviet space, but now in the former Warsaw Pact countries. In December of 21, two treaties were presented to the US and to NATO in the run-up to the war, and they essentially demanded that NATO return to the borders it had before the first enlargement, when Poland, Hungary, and the Czech Republic joined. And that's what Putin has always wanted. He wanted, in the words of one Russian expert, an equal partnership of unequals, and he hasn't gotten there.
Starting point is 00:12:29 Aaron Ross Powell Angela Stent is a professor emeritus at Georgetown and author of the book Putin's World, Russia Against the West and With the Rest. Thank you for taking the time with us today. Angela Stent Thank you. Aaron Ross Powell This episode was produced by Mark Rivers. It was edited by John Ketchum and Sarah Robbins. Our executive producer is Sammy Yannigan. It's Consider This from NPR. I'm Scott Detro.
Starting point is 00:12:56 Hey, it's Sarah Gonzalez. The economy has been in the news a lot lately. It's kind of always in the news. And Planet Money is always here to explain it. Each episode we tell a sometimes quirky, sometimes surprising, always interesting story that helps you better understand the economy. So when you hear something about cryptocurrency or where exactly your taxes go, yes I was. Listen to the Planet Money podcast from NPR. Keeping up with the news can feel like a 24-hour job. Luckily it is our job. Every podcast from NPR News Now podcast now. World news is important, but it can feel far away,
Starting point is 00:13:49 not on the State of the World podcast. With journalists around the world, you'll hear firsthand the effects of US trade actions in Canada and China, and meet a Mexican street sweeper who became a pop star. We don't go around the world, we're already there. Listen to the State of the World podcast from NPR every weekday.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.