The entire heated debate over deploying Western troops in Ukraine is fundamentally premature, as it hinges on a “postwar” scenario that is nowhere in sight. The threats and counter-threats are being exchanged over a future that cannot begin until a ceasefire is signed and a peace deal is reached.
The French plan, by its own definition, is to be deployed “the day the conflict stops.” Similarly, any US-led monitoring of a buffer zone would require, at a minimum, a stable and lasting truce. However, there are currently no active, high-level negotiations to achieve either of these preconditions.
This makes the current discussion highly abstract and speculative. Western nations are arguing over the composition of a force for a mission that has no start date, while Russia is threatening a force that has no legal basis to even enter the country yet.
The danger is that this premature debate could itself become an obstacle to peace. By escalating the rhetoric about a postwar settlement, both sides may be hardening their positions and making the compromises needed to actually end the war even more difficult to achieve. The focus on what happens after the war is distracting from the urgent task of stopping it.
A Ceasefire First: The Premature Debate Over Postwar Security
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