Rochester expert on international conflicts explains why Ukraine鈥檚 fate might be tied to Putin鈥檚 survival.

鈥淲hen shooting starts, things get out of hand. That鈥檚 important to recognize,鈥 says , a professor of political science at the , who is an expert on international conflicts, territorial disputes, why countries go to war, and how wars end.
鈥淚 study war because war is awful; it鈥檚 truly terrible.鈥 Thousands of Ukrainian civilians, and Ukrainian soldiers in the trenches, he notes, are going to die as a result of missiles and artillery fire without ever seeing any Russian soldiers.
鈥淲ar brings massive casualties, destruction, and costs for everybody concerned. We should not forget those people who are fighting and the costs they are willing to shoulder. Many of them will die because of Putin鈥檚 folly,鈥 says Goemans, who is the author of (Princeton University Press, 2000) and the coauthor of (Cambridge University Press, 2011).
Goemans warns that a Russian victory鈥攂ut also a Russian defeat or stalemate鈥攃ould have dramatically bad consequences for the West, and indeed the whole world.
Q&A with Hein Goemans
Why does Russia want Ukraine?
- Putin wants to reestablish a Russian empire and at the same time prevent a democratic encirclement around Russia.
Goemans: I read his goals as twofold: he wants to reestablish directly or indirectly, by annexation or by puppet-regimes, a Russian empire鈥攂e it the former USSR or Tsarist Russia. A second possible answer has to do with the role of domestic Russian politics, which the standard literature on conflict takes very seriously: Putin has seen what happened in some former Soviet successor republics and the former Yugoslavia, several of which experienced 鈥溾 and democratized. Indeed, it was a Color Revolution in Ukraine in 2014, which Putin mischaracterizes as a military coup. He wants to prevent more of these revolutions and prevent a democratic encirclement of countries around him, which could provide a safe haven for Russian dissidents who鈥檇 be dangerous to Putin鈥檚 political survival. Both of these goals overlap in the sense that he is seeking regime change, which is a dangerous game. As my colleague Alexander Downes at George Washington University has recently shown,
Why now?
- Putin perceives the West as weak but is also fighting for his own political survival.
Goemans: One answer could be that he now feels strong enough to do it while the West appears in disarray. He doesn鈥檛 want an increasingly westernized country in his backyard; instead he wants puppets whom he can control to protect his own domestic political position. Of course, it鈥檚 not just his political position. It鈥檚 also his head if he loses power. It鈥檚 virtually certain that he would be prosecuted back home and would go to jail. Very bad things could happen to him鈥攕omething that I think he鈥檚 very well aware of.
What about Ukraine might have set Putin off?
- Ukraine represents a westernized counter example to Russia鈥檚 autocratic dictatorial system.
Goemans: Ukraine is becoming more westernized, it鈥檚 becoming more diverse and has a regime that he cannot control. Over time, it sets an example for others in Russia who would like to become more democratic. It provides a counter example to Russia鈥檚 autocratic dictatorial system. You have these rows of dominoes, one Color Revolution after another, and at the end of the domino series is Russia. All this is dangerous for him.
What are 鈥榮alami tactics鈥 in international relations and how do they apply here?
- Salami tactics involves asking for more, slice by slice, until you have all you want.
Goemans: 鈥淪alami tactics鈥 mean you ask for a little bit more and a little bit more until you have complete control鈥攊n this case Russia over Ukraine. There鈥檚 also an interlocking commitment problem here: Ukraine cannot promise not to join NATO in the long term, which Russia sees as a threat to its borders. At the same time, Russia can鈥檛 promise credibly not to ask for more if Ukraine made some concessions now, whether it be territorial concessions, regime change, or a promise not to join NATO.

Is invading Ukraine a war over territory, which is your research specialty?
- Maybe. But Putin is after more than just Ukraine鈥檚 separatist territories.
Goemans: Some people thought initially this would be a war over territory, essentially about the two separatist areas, and that Putin wouldn鈥檛 claim much more. That鈥檚 evidently not the case. It could still be considered a war over territory but only in the sense that he wants to annex the entire Ukraine, which seems to me unlikely to succeed. It seems much more likely that he鈥檒l install a puppet regime instead. And the reason for that, from the theory of warfare and from a leader perspective, is that he does it to ensure his personal survival.
What happens if Putin succeeds in Ukraine?
- It would represent a blatant transgression of international norms, diplomacy, and relations.

Goemans: The principles of the International Order would be destroyed. Such principles include 鈥渢erritorial integrity,鈥 which is something that Russia committed to when Ukraine gave up its nuclear weapons and became independent. Essentially, Putin is flipping the bird at the West and the rest of the world. For example, he declared a 鈥渕ilitary operation鈥 right at the time when the UN Security Council was meeting to discuss the crisis.
Other countries, most prominently the Baltic states, but also other USSR successor republics, will have every reason to think they are next. If Russia is successful, the world will change and NATO will have to rearm and all countries will have to spend more on defense. There will be rounds of arming and rearming. In this environment, even a small mistake, a glitch, a missed phone call, a mistranslation, a malfunctioning GPS can get out of hand really quickly.
What do you think Putin will do if he loses in Ukraine?
- If Putin doesn鈥檛 achieve his goals, he may pursue extremely risky actions in the hope of staying in power.
Goemans: A loss might doom his domestic, political, and physical survival. In a very recent book, , Alexander Downes suggests that these kinds of regime changes, which Putin is pursuing, often backfire very badly. If Russia鈥檚 objectives fail, Putin is really in deep trouble. As you can see today from the , there is a significant and sizable component in the Russian public that鈥檚 actually willing to go outside and protest against this war, which is a very risky and extremely brave course of action.
So, if Putin doesn鈥檛 achieve his goals, it becomes much more likely that he鈥檒l be overthrown. That鈥檚 why he may do some very risky things鈥攚hich is called 鈥済ambling for resurrection鈥濃攊n the hope it鈥檒l keep him in power. I wrote about that in my first book, to explain why the First World War lasted for four years although the German leaders had already concluded in November 1914 that they couldn鈥檛 win; they fought for another four years because they were afraid of domestic political punishment.
The dangerous thing that is difficult to grasp is that the West may not be able to do anything to counter the logic of gambling for resurrection. There is talk of giving Putin an 鈥渙ff-ramp鈥 but that completely misses the point that Putin is afraid domestic enemies might overthrow and kill him, and there鈥檚 little the West can do to address those fears.
Is this the most dangerous situation since World War II?
- Yes. We are in a situation where Putin鈥檚 鈥渟uccess鈥 or failure in Ukraine both present dangerous situations.
Goemans: Yes. It鈥檚 not just Putin鈥檚 possible success that scares me, it鈥檚 also the possibility of a big failure for Russia. So if we鈥檙e in a situation where either success or failure both present horrible, dangerous situations, we鈥檇 better be very careful and think very, very carefully about what we can do, and perhaps what we cannot do, and prepare accordingly. You don鈥檛 want to corner Putin with sanctions to the extent that he feels that he must gamble鈥攁ll or nothing. The impulse, and I certainly share it, is to punish him severely. But if you punish him too severely, then you risk his doing even more dangerous things in order to protect himself personally. So it鈥檚 a very difficult tightrope to walk. I鈥檓 sure that the Biden administration is aware of these things. I鈥檝e been impressed with the competence shown鈥攖he careful, mature attitude, the communications, the collaboration with allies.
What else did Putin hint at in his recent, very belligerent speech?
- Putin said that the borders drawn after World War I and World War II are illegitimate and had to go.

Goemans: One thing he said in , which is just stunning, is that nationalism cannot be the basis of a state. Everybody in academia and most of the world thinks that nationalism is the justification and the basis of a state. But his speech went further than that. He said the borders that were drawn by Lenin and by Stalin, partially as a result of the First and Second World War, are illegitimate and have to go. And if those borders have to go, well, then there is no obvious stopping point: Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Armenia, Georgia, Moldova, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia鈥攁ll the successor republics are going to ask, 鈥淎re we next?鈥 The new threats against Finland and Sweden, to warn them off from joining NATO, are also extremely concerning.
Now, of course, in many of the successor republics Putin already has an elite, which is favorably inclined toward him. He has puppets in Kazakhstan, he has puppets in Belarus and elsewhere that he can control. Leaders in these countries depend on him, directly and indirectly, to stay in office. So it鈥檚 this whole musical-chairs scenario of dictators who are all afraid of losing office. In order to prop up one, Putin has to prop up all.
The question is, which empire does he think needs reconstituting? Is it the Soviet Union? Or is it Tsarist Russia? And if it鈥檚 the latter鈥攁nd there are some indications in his speeches that he does mean the latter鈥攖hen Poland and other countries are going to be justifiably worried.