“It came back, Arkady knew, to three things: money, propaganda, and terror. They weren’t discrete entities but a triskelion, forever whirling around each other. This was the mindset of spies, the men whose formative years had been spent in the margins of the shadow world. The more rules you break, the more success you have. The game never pauses and never stops. There are no periods of war and peace, just active hostility and retrenchments. There are no threats other than those which can be talked up, or in many cases made up, the better to justify eliminating them. There are no social problems that would be solved if solving them would reduce people’s dependence on the state. There are no grand plans, no master strategies, just the lust for power, the insane addictive desire to accumulate more and more because too much is never enough.”— American mystery and suspense novelist Martin Cruz Smith (1942-2025), Independence Square: Arkady Renko in Ukraine (2023)
What Donald Trump has presented to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy shouldn’t be dignified with the
phrase “peace plan.” Even “surrender plan” has the diplomatic scent of perfume
about it. Believe it or not, I don’t even think “appeasement” does it.
No, in its demands that Ukraine yield significant portions of its territory to Russia and cap the size of its security forces, along with an implied threat to curtail U.S. weapons deliveries if Zelenskyy doesn’t capitulate by Thanksgiving, the right word is "ultimatum"—something that Russian President Vladimir Putin (pictured) might make.
While
reading this penultimate of 11 Arkady Renko mysteries by the late superb Martin Cruz Smith, I came across a succinct passage on Ukrainian history that I wish
Trump could have read.
But what
would have been the use? The President’s attention span is such that he’s lucky
to digest a few bullets on a Powerpoint slide, let alone interconnected
sentences.
Then I
came across the quote above. Forget about Trump—I wish large portions of MAGA
could read and ponder this. It explains so much about Putin, and, by the end,
Trump himself (“There are no threats other than those which can be talked up,
or in many cases made up”).

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