tease

Opinion: Ukraine and the American divide that Putin inflamed

Those using aggression to divide are playing into Putin’s hand.

  • By Rich Moniak
  • Tuesday, March 1, 2022 3:28pm
  • Opinion

By Rich Moniak

“NATO, shelter our sky — we’ll handle the rest” read the sign held by Viktor Tkachenko at a Juneau solidarity protest for Ukraine on Saturday. Calling for a no-fly zone over his country that’s been invaded by Russia echoed an earlier request by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to “close the airspace.”

However, Zelenskyy’s plea and his amazingly courageous defiance of Russia hasn’t resulted in NATO’s military defense of his country.

That’s not because Western leaders are weak, as some Republicans seem quite happy to argue. Sen. Lisa Murkowski got it right when she stated Putin’s “grievous violation of international law … came with a clear view, formed over the course of years and only reinforced in recent months, that the West is divided and will not make Russia pay for its actions.”

As a 17-year-old who left Ukraine for Alaska less than a year ago, it’s understandable that Tkachenko wants the West to use more than economic sanctions against the Russian invaders. His fears for family and friends he left behind are real. Even if they survive the war, their freedoms could be seriously curtailed. In fact, under a regime controlled by Russian President Vladimir Putin, Ukrainians could be jailed for speaking at a protest as he did on Saturday.

But because Ukraine is not a member of NATO, the alliance isn’t bound by treaty to engage in what would most certainly escalate into a confrontation between the world’s largest militaries and possessors of nuclear weapons.

Those facts left Ukraine vulnerable and NATO appearing militarily weak.

But Kelly Tshibaka, a Republican candidate for Murkowski’s senate seat, issued a statement claiming Russia’s invasion “demonstrates what happens to world stability when the United States shows weakness. For too long, Joe Biden placated Putin’s desires to complete the Nord Stream 2 natural gas pipeline to Germany.”

That’s a conveniently simple view of a complicated debate between America and its NATO allies.

Congress included a provision imposing sanctions related to the project in the 2020 National Defense Authorization Act. Many European leaders, particularly in Germany, opposed the move as U.S. interference in the affairs of their nations. Then-President Donald Trump signed the NDAA into law in December 2019.

At that point, construction of the pipeline was 90% complete. Biden waived the sanctions last May. With full European support, they were reimposed after Russia invaded Ukraine.

That part of the divided West is best described as the difficult hand Biden inherited when he was elected President. It goes back to earlier sanctions against Russia after it seized Crimea and began supporting armed separatists in other regions of Ukraine. The U.S. and NATO didn’t always see eye to eye on those either.

Tshibaka isn’t interested in those facts. She and other Republicans calling Biden weak are attempting to use the war to push Americans further into their partisan corners.

That’s the other part of the divided West that Putin saw as an advantage. Indeed, since 2016, he’s been deliberately trying to make it worse.

Americans were already politically polarized and war weary when U.S. intelligence agencies determined Russia interfered the 2016 presidential election, often with the objective of aiding Trump’s campaign. The Republican-led Senate Intelligence Committee agreed with that conclusion.

Despite those findings, Trump pitifully accepted Putin’s denials, thus leading a wide swath of the American public to trust Putin more than our nation’s intelligence experts.

We were also pulled into opposite corners by Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into Trump’s possible collusion with Russia.

Six months after Mueller reported the investigation didn’t establish such a coordinated effort, Trump attempted to withhold congressionally approved military aid for Ukraine’s defense against Russia. The resulting impeachment by the Democratic further amplified our internal divisions.

Then the COVID-19 pandemic hit. Aside from ruining a lot of businesses and putting people out of work, disagreements over school closures, masks and vaccinations kept the anger between Americans in the public spotlight for two years.

Finally, Trump’s ongoing false assertions that the 2020 presidential election was stolen from him has left well over half of the country’s Republicans, including Tshibaka, believing Biden is an illegitimate president.

In this atmosphere, it’s nearly impossible to appear as a united front against Putin. And those who are using his vile aggression to divide us are playing into his hand.

• Rich Moniak is a Juneau resident and retired civil engineer with more than 25 years of experience working in the public sector. Columns, My Turns and Letters to the Editor represent the view of the author, not the view of the Juneau Empire. Have something to say? Here’s how to submit a My Turn or letter.

More in Opinion

Web
Have something to say?

Here’s how to add your voice to the conversation.

A sign reading, "Help Save These Historic Homes" is posted in front of a residence on Telephone Hill on Friday Nov. 21, 2025. (Mari Kanagy / Juneau Empire)
OPINION: The Telephone Hill cost is staggering

The Assembly approved $5.5 million to raze Telephone Hill as part of… Continue reading

Win Gruening (courtesy)
OPINION: Eaglecrest’s opportunity to achieve financial independence, if the city allows it

It’s a well-known saying that “timing is everything.” Certainly, this applies to… Continue reading

Gov. Mike Dunleavy gestures during his State of the State address on Jan. 22, 2026. (Photo by Corinne Smith/Alaska Beacon)
OPINION: It’s time to end Alaska’s fiscal experiment

For decades, Alaska has operated under a fiscal and budgeting system unlike… Continue reading

Atticus Hempel stands in a row of his shared garden. (photo by Ari Romberg)
My Turn: What’s your burger worth?

Atticus Hempel reflects on gardening, fishing, hunting, and foraging for food for in Gustavus.

At the Elvey Building, home of UAF’s Geophysical Institute, Carl Benson, far right, and Val Scullion of the GI business office attend a 2014 retirement party with Glenn Shaw. Photo by Ned Rozell
Alaska Science Forum: Carl Benson embodied the far North

Carl Benson’s last winter on Earth featured 32 consecutive days during which… Continue reading

Van Abbott is a long-time resident of Alaska and California. He has held financial management positions in government and private organizations, and is now a full-time opinion writer. He served in the late nineteen-sixties in the Peace Corps as a teacher. (Contributed)
When lying becomes the only qualification

How truth lost its place in the Trump administration.

Jamie Kelter Davis/The New York Times
Masked federal agents arrive to help immigration agents detain immigrants and control protesters in Chicago, June 4, 2025. With the passage of President Trump’s domestic policy law, the Department of Homeland Security is poised to hire thousands of new Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents, and double detention space.
OPINION: $85 billion and no answers

How ICE’s expansion threatens law, liberty, and accountability.

Yereth Rosen/Alaska Beacon
The entrance to the Alaska Gasline Development Corp.’s Anchorage office is seen on Aug. 11, 2023. The state-owned AGDC is pushing for a massive project that would ship natural gas south from the North Slope, liquefy it and send it on tankers from Cook Inlet to Asian markets. The AGDC proposal is among many that have been raised since the 1970s to try commercialize the North Slope’s stranded natural gas.
My Turn: Alaskans must proceed with caution on gasline legislation

Alaskans have watched a parade of natural gas pipeline proposals come and… Continue reading

Most Read