Keeping promises
Proposed Western ‘security guarantees’ for Ukraine would mean little without boots on the ground
While Western leaders have been discussing different ways to provide security guarantees to Kyiv in the event of a peace deal with Russia, they are faced with a paradox: if their proposals are too weak, they won’t be enough to defend Ukraine, but if they are too robust, Russia will simply not accept them.
Putin, confident that Russia is winning the war, looks to be using Trump’s peace initiative to play for time.
Without boots on the ground, Western security guarantees will be as flimsy as the assurances they, and Russia, gave Ukraine in the 1994 Budapest Memorandum, when Kyiv gave up its nuclear weapons.
The immediate purpose of all the talk of “security guarantees” may be to prevent Trump from cutting Ukraine adrift, and to shift responsibility for the war back toward Putin.









