Russia’s War in Ukraine: What Should Anti-War Scholars and Academics Think? What are anti-war activists to do in the face of an aggressive war of conquest launched by an authoritarian state against a democratic government?
“Anti-war” embraces a broad community of thought that runs from pragmatic realists to idealistic pacifists. Anti-war activists tend to reject the idea that war is a legitimate tool of statecraft. At the same time, most (but not all) anti-war thinkers reject as specious the idea that a nation under attack from an aggressor ought to lay down its arms and accommodate itself to the demands of its assailant. For example, few who critiqued the Vietnam War from an anti-war perspective demanded that the Viet Cong lay down its arms, that North Vietnam cease support for the insurgency in the South, or that China and the USSR refrain from supporting the DPRVN. Thus, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has necessarily created tension within anti-war activist circles.
This tension is evident in an unfortunate article for The Progressive, in which Phyllis Bennis argues for an immediate cease-fire and negotiations between Russia and Ukraine, and for an end to the sanctions regime against Russia. Given that the United States has exceedingly little influence over Moscow’s decision making, this amounts to a demand that the United States force Kyiv to accede to Russian demands. The article was approvingly cited by the Quincy Institute, a pro-Restraint think tank that has come under internal and external critique for excusing Russian aggression and soft-pedaling Russian behavior. While no single article can represent the breadth and depth of anti-war opinion, this one raises several dilemmas that are worth engaging.
Justifying Russia
Bennis holds the West partially responsible for Russia’s decision to invade Ukraine, a temptation common in anti-war circles which paint Russia as the victim of foreign aggression. NATO, it has been argued, painted Russia into a corner by refusing to rule out expansion into Ukraine, thus provoking the war. As we have seen, however, Russia’s invasion does not begin to approach meeting most of the requirements either of legal military conduct under the UN Charter, or a “just war” under the norms of Christian Just War Theory. The West (such that it is) may have conducted itself unwisely with respect to Russian concerns, but this does not provide plausible legal or moral justification for the invasion. Any appeal to the justice of Russia’s war is, from an anti-war perspective, utterly nonsensical. If Russia can legitimately wage war based on the casus belli outlined by President Putin in February of this year, then virtually any state can attack any other at any time. Worse, even if we accept the justice of Russia’s claims, they surely pale against the magnitude of the justice of Ukraine’s war effort, making the argument that the United States should try to force an end to the conflict an unfortunate combination of vile and absurd.
Authorship
Bennis also argues that anti-war activism should be directed against the US government rather than against the Russian government. The idea that Western governments should be subjected to greater criticism because of the relatively open natures of their political systems is superficially appealing but also terribly limited. It is true that open systems of government enable activists to make their case to the public and directly to policymakers, and there is also a certain logic to arguments about responsibility and authorship. When a democratic state goes to war (or enables a war), the people are in effect the author of that war, and it is hardly unreasonable to complain about being assessed responsibility for a war you disagree with.
But the claim has obvious shortcomings. Criticizing US policies which extend a war of justifiable defense against an aggressor instead of criticizing the aggressor itself (beyond requisite hand-waving about Russian behavior) necessarily paints a distorted and deceptive picture of a conflict. Putin’s regime ought not to escape criticism because it is authoritarian; rather, any sensible account should target Moscow both for its authoritarianism and for its aggression. The same goes for Saudi Arabia and Iran and the People’s Republic of China. The Putin government has agency; it did not need to invade Ukraine, just as it does not need to arrest and imprison domestic critics of the war. Any account that focuses on the decision of the US to support Ukraine at the expense of the Russian decision to invade Ukraine does violence to reality and obscures the actual moral calculus of the conflict.
The Future
Activism also needs to take a long-term view. No perspective which ensures that an aggressor will enjoy the fruits of aggression can meaningfully be described as anti-war. A cease-fire would have the immediate effect of locking in Russian territorial gains, and an end to sanctions would ensure that Russia would pay no further price for its invasion. This would have the effect not only of consigning vast portions of Ukraine to Russian domination, but also of ensuring that Moscow (and much of the rest of the world) views war of territorial conquest as a legitimate and useful tool of statecraft. Instead of ending the war, a cease-fire and a cessation of sanctions would, at best, put it on pause to be resumed under circumstances of Moscow’s choosing.
Pragmatism
Finally, a principled but pragmatic anti-war activist could plausibly argue that in a context in which resistance against superior power is hopeless, it is the responsibility of a defender to concede in order to avoid the extravagant evils of war. Whatever the costs of surrender, they are necessarily less than the costs of surrender added to the costs of military defeat. This perspective is limited, because both uncertainty and policy choices matter for the difference between victory and defeat. Ukraine alone might be doomed, but Ukraine with Western support… perhaps not. And in any case, the situation that holds between Russia and Ukraine today cannot plausibly be described as a certain Russian victory. The supply of additional weapons to Ukraine improves Kyiv’s negotiating position, a necessary condition for Russia to contemplate discussing peace.
Parting Thoughts
Every problem is an opportunity. The Iraq War was relatively uncomplicated for anti-war activists, and the Afghanistan War only somewhat more so. Russia’s war on Ukraine is more complicated in that it has evoked global sympathy and a sense of heroic righteousness. For anti-war activists who have long stressed the malign influence of the defense industry and the perfidy of NATO, embracing the idea of transferring heavy weapons to Ukraine is perhaps too steep of a hill to climb. At the same time, such activists should be wary of making demands that would effectively guarantee the success of Russia’s war of territorial conquest, and open the doors to more such conquests in the future.
Dr. Robert Farley has taught security and diplomacy courses at the Patterson School since 2005. He received his BS from the University of Oregon in 1997, and his Ph. D. from the University of Washington in 2004. Dr. Farley is the author of Grounded: The Case for Abolishing the United States Air Force (University Press of Kentucky, 2014), the Battleship Book (Wildside, 2016), and Patents for Power: Intellectual Property Law and the Diffusion of Military Technology (University of Chicago, 2020). He has contributed extensively to a number of journals and magazines, including the National Interest, the Diplomat: APAC, World Politics Review, and the American Prospect. Dr. Farley is also a founder and senior editor of Lawyers, Guns and Money.

403Forbidden
August 23, 2022 at 3:09 pm
Heh, heh. Anti-war movement has basically experienced a whimpering collapse all over the planet.
Ultra fast fb/google-controlled social media plus growing powerful msm media plus today’s hollywoody political correctness plus goebbellian state dept have pounded anti-war into submission.
Also, almighty US dollar, US-saudi collaboration and US-NATO expansion basically strangled or asphyxiated (choked) anti-war spirit senseless. Thanks, biden.
Jon
August 23, 2022 at 8:02 pm
This article is so far off base, it’s hard to know where to start, aside from noting that it almost entirely avoids any consideration of the current antiwar left. Farley does, however, correctly observe that agreeing with Putin’s premises would put back military doctrine and diplomacy more than 150 years.
The current Western antiwar Left is predominantly acting from a presumption that the enemy of my enemy is my friend. And the enemy in this and other cases is US foreign policy – a point of view not without basis. There may also be some latent muscle memory for the alleged positives of Soviet foreign policy and anti-imperial stance. Those admirable impulses are misplaced with Russia as it exists today.
While wise policy should always gather the most widespread viewpoints, there should also be some connection to facts attending. Looking for the facts, it is quite easy to se that Russia was looking for the pretext of a casus belli, and to extend its prior conquest of Ukrainian territories, preferably with the rapid removal of its government.
Russia might be best advised now, to review the process of its prior disengagement from various African and Middle eastern nations, Afghanistan, and Eastern Europe, for guidance towards future action that will best preserve Russia.
Jim Rohrer
August 24, 2022 at 9:18 am
Your definition of a pragmatic anti-war activist seems a bit distorted. You are saying this position does not apply if the victim nation has a plausible chance of winning. But what if the alternative to war is compromise? For example, letting Russia have the separatist regions and the Crimea? A cease fire based on shrinkage of Ukraine would save lives and infrastructure and reflect the de facto reality. As a realist, I would say competition between states is based on self-interest, not moral principles. Protecting the citizenry from enemies without and within is the first goal of a state and failure to do that is not in the government’s interest. Is Ukraine protecting its citizens by demanding total victory? I guess time will tell. But the citizens of the Ukraine eventually will demand a change in government if this one seems to have thrown them under the bus.
tony
August 24, 2022 at 10:01 am
The “anti-war” crowd is nothing more than an anti-United States crowd. Their motto: whatever America has done, is doing, or will do, is evil!!”.
Scottfs
August 24, 2022 at 10:13 am
Russia and China have a long history of funding anti-war groups, who specifically criticize the West, and excuse Soviet/Russia, as well as Chinese aggession.
The only threat NATO posed to Russia was to stand in the way of Putin’s vainglorious plan to reconstitute the Soviet Empire.
We must step up our efforts to supply Ukraine with effective weapons of war. And sanctions must continue until the last Russian soldier is expelled from Ukraine.
Anything less rewards aggression.
Steven
August 24, 2022 at 10:30 am
@Jon, I love your writing style.
Matthew
August 24, 2022 at 1:17 pm
Gandhi is the last true anti war figure. He was full of shit in telling the Jews to basically lay back and enjoy the Holocaust. The current version of the anti-war movement is simply opposed to the United States. Its of course funny how many people protested GW Bush with “war is not the answer” signs but did not see the need to keep those signs up when Obama was in the White House, despite his continued use of war. So in conclusion: 1. There is not an anti-war movement 2. And those that profess to being part of the anti-war movement are simply hypocrites who enjoy the feelings they get in pretending to be superior to everyone.
mjp28
August 24, 2022 at 8:33 pm
Matthew
I agree with your assessment of the anti war movement in the USA. In 2002 there was a major border conflict between India and Pakistan with border clashes after terrorist attacks in India that originated from a terrorist organization in Pakistan. The potential for a nuclear war was public between the 2 countries. The Indian government stated they would never be the first to use nuclear weapons in the impending war. President Musharraf of Pakistan stated that Pakistan could not guarantee that they would not be the first to use nuclear weapons (the Pakistan military was weaker than that of India). A college classmate of mine was a US ambassador to a country in that region and confirmed to me years later that the 2 countries came close to a nuclear war. The so called anti war movement was completely silent over this conflict. One would think that anti war groups would be be openly protesting at the Indian and the Pakistan embassies. One would also expect that a nuclear war in which tens of millions or hundreds of millions would have died would be concerning to anti war groups. No protests, not even a concerned email.
A Gravitt
August 25, 2022 at 9:44 am
The outlining of the position that the cost of waging a war and then surrendering is much greater than simply capitulating, should also consider the cost to citizens of living under an oppressive regime ad infinitum, a prospect that even a relatively free people might wish to avoid at all costs, dying rather than submitting to tyranny. That they would hope that the pain inflicted on the aggressors would eventually reverse the resolve of the tyrants. Hope maintained might not be sustainable, but it is powerful. I find your articles simple excellent.
Thank you.
Bertram
August 25, 2022 at 3:56 pm
Anti-war groups are limited by their politics which tends to exclusively be anti-West. When faced with aggression by a power that is itself “Anti-West” they are conflicted.
Isn’t the enemy of my enemy, my friend?
What about when the enemy of my enemy is victimizing an innocent party?
They have always been the useful idiots of foreign dictatorships.