The Volokh Conspiracy
Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent
How to Fight Putin by Offering Russians "a Million Little Carrots"
Defeating Putin is better accomplished by measures that divide him from the Russian people.

A few days ago, I put up a post expanding on economist Timur Kuran's idea of combating the Russian invasion of Ukraine by granting asylum to Russian troops who surrender, thereby increasing incentives to desert. Canadian political commentator Scott Gilmore offers a much broader version of the same idea, one that isn't limited to soldiers. He suggests Western nations take a wide range of steps to encourage Russians to join with us in opposing Putin:
The western alliance has moved quicker and implemented more sanctions than anyone would have predicted just a week ago…
And, unfortunately, this historically harsh set of sanctions has failed to move Putin….
Perhaps, then, the west should consider an alliance wide-strategy of offering a million little carrots aimed not at Russia, but at Russians.
For example, the Ukrainian government is now promising Russian deserters 5 million rubles (approximately US $47,000), which is 450 times more than what the Kremlin pays the families of soldiers killed in action. NATO and the EU could match that and add an offer of asylum for them and their families….
Even if each deserting Russian soldier was offered a huge bounty, say $100,000, it would still be incredibly cost effective when you weigh it against the price of supporting a protracted war, or the cost in men and material to remove that soldier from the battlefield in the traditional fashion.
This strategy could be applied more widely. For example, some of these million little carrots could be offered to Russian diplomats. We have already seen at least one resign in protest, but there could be hundreds more if the western alliance also dangled in front of them a path to citizenship and a stipend to cover living costs. This may seem unfair, but the world needs to be pragmatic about this and realize that bigger fish will require larger bait.
For senior military staff or Kremlin officials in Moscow, maybe even notable journalists or celebrities, we could also offer a path to citizenship and an even larger stipend….
But for them and all the rest, there would be one very important catch. All of these little carrots would require a recorded video statement explaining their opposition to the war and urging others to join them.
If thousands of these testimonials were shared in the media and online, coming from powerful Russians and lowly conscripts both, it would be almost impossible for the Kremlin to control the narrative domestically. It would be a body blow to morale, and it would handicap further attempts at disinformation and propaganda.
But, most importantly, a million little carrots strategy would remove Russian boots on the ground. If you consider the slow progress of the Russian military after (according to Pentagon estimates) 90 per cent of the troops assigned to this invasion have already been deployed, it is clear that even a small number of deserters will have a disproportionately large impact on Moscow's ability to fight this war….
I agree with most of Gilmore's points. But I would make the video optional rather than mandatory. Some potential deserters or defectors might fear to make the video, because possible retaliation against their families back home. In addition, the video would be less credible if Russian viewers find out (as they likely would) that it was a mandatory condition of getting asylum in the West.
The strategy of incentivizing Russians to come over to our side can be broadened still further, by offering an open door to Russian migrants, including those who are not high government officials, oligarchs or celebrities. Ordinary people, particularly those with useful scientific technical skills, are still of value to the Putin regime. Better to have them on our side instead. I will have have more to say about this point in an op ed in the New York Times, which is expected to be out on Tuesday. Among other things, it will address a number of potential objections.
This approach should be supplemented by doing everything reasonably possible to avoid sanctions and "cancellations" aimed at ordinary Russians, especially those who oppose Putin's regime. There is good reason to take steps that deny resources to the government (such as freezing Russia's central bank assets abroad) and penalize its high officials and collaborators. But, for both moral and strategic reasons, we should minimize collateral damage to innocent civilians. Political scientist Yascha Mounk makes some good points on this in a recent Washington Post article:
Although we are waging a righteous battle against Vladimir Putin, we are not at war with the Russian people. Acting as if we are is as immoral as it is counterproductive….
Putin undoubtedly enjoys widespread support. But over the past week, many Russians have found the courage to criticize his assault on Ukraine, often incurring tremendous risk in the process.
Thousands have already been arrested for protesting the war. About 7,000 Russian scientists and academics have signed an open letter demanding "an immediate halt to all military operations directed against Ukraine." Similar petitions are circulating among teachers, doctors and many other groups. What appears to be the biggest one, on Change.org, has attracted over a million signatories.
Even more Russians share these sentiments but lack the bravery or the opportunity to speak out….
All of this drives home the importance of continuing to draw the vital distinction between the Russian government and the Russian people — something that many pundits, politicians and institutional leaders are, sadly, failing to do….
Heavy sanctions will unavoidably impose significant costs on ordinary Russians. But since they are necessary to assist Ukraine and weaken Putin, they are morally defensible. It is right to stop doing business with Russian companies, to seize the property of oligarchs who got rich thanks to their connections to the Kremlin, and to ban sports teams from competing in international competitions under the Russian flag….
But none of this is a reason to punish individuals for the accident of their birth or to cast Russia's rich culture under a general pall of suspicion. Dictators do not speak for everybody who shares their nationality. And so we must avoid punishing ordinary Russians who neither have close links to the Kremlin nor represent their country in an official capacity. It would be a serious injustice to stop Russian academics from giving talks in the West, to subject every Russian living outside the country to an ideological litmus test or to cancel performances by Russian artists based purely on their nationality.
As Gilmore and Mounk explain, differentiating between Russia's government and its people is not only morally right, but also a good way to counter Putin's propaganda and weaken his regime's position.
Like the Cold War against the Soviet Union, the conflict with Putin is not just a military confrontation decided by material factors, but also a war of ideas and ideologies. The ideology of liberal democracy ultimately triumphed over communism. It can also prevail over Putin's brutal authoritarian nationalism. Indeed, Putinism probably has a much weaker appeal than communism did, at the height of the latter's influence. Putin's "Russian world" is far less enticing than the utopia of freedom and limitless abundance once promised by Lenin and Stalin. But we are far less likely to win if we alienate large numbers of potentially sympathetic Russians by unnecessarily lumping them in with the enemy.
The "million carrots" strategy is not a complete substitute for sanctions against the Russian state and providing military aid to Ukraine. But it can help increase the effectiveness of these other measures, and at little cost. Indeed, Russian defectors, immigrants, and military deserters, can make valuable contributions to Western economies and societies, as have previous generations of Russian immigrants during the Soviet era, and before. This is another point I will cover in greater detail in my forthcoming New York Times article.
UPDATE: The New York Times article is now out, and available here.
Editor's Note: We invite comments and request that they be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of Reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
This sounds great until the Russians remember people coming down with an acute case of Polonium exposure.
How many? Each cost a lot of money to execute, and there was real risk of being caught and unmasked. Even a hundred more would be exceedingly risky.
I'm referring more to the bare fact of it being done than the means employed. Less showy ways could be used for more numerous examples. But just the fact that the Russian goverment was willing to carry out such an assassination has to figure in people's choices.
$100 million for the scalp of Putin is far cheaper than the $billlions being wasted on this war. The cost will be several $trillions, when it can easily be ended by killing the vile lawyer, Putin.
This is simple math addition. Before that can be done, the lawyer scumbags immunizing him in the USA must be stopped.
When we say the cost will be $trillions, that money is going to oligarchs. So thousands will die to enrich a few. These few are protected by the lawyer profession.
"Putin undoubtedly enjoys widespread support."
We really do not know that. You can't measure opinion in a state where expressing the 'wrong' opinion has dire consequences. Maybe he has widespread support, maybe just widespread mortal terror. You can't know which it is so long as people don't dare speak their minds.
My own knowledge of Russian attitudes is pretty deep, since I had a conversation with an actual Russian about 10+ years ago.
At the time she told me that Putin actually was fairly popular, though not as much as the election results might suggest, because a lot of Russians still felt nostalgia for lost empire. I haven't checked with her lately.
Here's how we can tell that Putin does not currently have widespread support: there are no massive pro-Putin demonstrations. Not spontaneous ones, and not even ones organized by the state. If Putin thought he could safely engineer such things, he would, as a show of defiance to the west. But he obviously is worried that these would not turn out the way he wants them to.
That is correct, David. Fake polls. The validity of polling methods has never been restored since people are only using cell phones.
This is the rare instance where VC'ers could have learned from the commenters.
As was previously pointed out in the comments to the earlier post, any Russian soldier is granted asylum (let alone given $100,000 or any kind of money) to desert will be putting his family in mortal danger via retaliation. What soldier would take such a deal? Or what other Russian for that matter? To me this absolutely blows the proposal out of the water.
Yes.
It's not a bad idea in the abstract, but I wouldn't expect to get enough takers to have any real effect.
I can think of two reasons.
1) They don't have any family.
2) They don't like their family.
Good points.
This is not like COVID-19 restrictions, where everyone has to comply for the restrictions to achieve the advertised goal to eliminate COVID-19.
Not all soldiers have to desert, just enough soldiers.
“ Although we are waging a righteous battle against Vladimir Putin”
The above from the Washington Post begs the old response from Tonto to the Lone Ranger when the duo are surrounded by hostile Indians and Ranger asks ‘what do we do?’ Tonto’s response: who is ‘we’ Kimosabe?
When even a single friend or acquaintance who isn’t on an media payroll suggests to me that we have any interest of any kind in this conflict then perhaps I’ll find your suggestions worth contemplating. But, as my response suggests: I know not one person who has expressed to me the belief we need to involve ourselves in this NATO clusterf**k.
This agitation for war is 100% synthetic and manufactured. This isn’t an ‘we’ problem.
I have no idea WTF you are saying, but you sound vaguely like a Putin troll.
You need new friends.
LOL, “Putin troll”. I have seen some excellent commentary from you in the past but this comment is beyond the pale.
Absolutely!
"We" are at war with neither Russia nor Putin: only Congress can declare "we" to be at war, at Congress has -- perhaps wisely -- elected not to make such a declaration. "We" should not be expending taxpayer resources on the battle.
A long time ago, Virginia declared itself at war against invaders from its north and Virginians fought valiantly to expel the invaders. Some -- including Professor Somin -- now call these valiant Virginians rebels and call for the public shaming of the leaders who led them. The Virginia loyalists were simply doing what those in the Ukraine now do -- protecting their homeland. Emperor Somin has no clothes: his position is based on personal moral view which holds only the weight held by, for example, right-to-life advocates. While "we" do have morals, such morals are topics of votes, not mandates from those in the Academy.
So pro-Putin trolls are also neoconfederates. What a shock.
Fight them over there, or fight them here.
I'm not your friend or acquaintance, and I'm not on any media payrolls (but if you have deep pockets, call my agent!), but I am deeply concerned about Ukraine. There are two reasons for this. The first is simply empathy - I wouldn't want to live under Putin's rule, to the point that I would personally fight to avoid it, and so I empathize with Ukrainians who also don't want to live under Putin's rule.
Secondly, I don't want Omaha to be nuked. And it's not clear whether rolling over for Putin in Ukraine now reduces the chances of Omaha being nuked. Doing so reduces the chance of Omaha being nuked this month, but it might well increase the chance of Omaha being nuked in the next 5 years. It's really hard to know. If you are 100% certain what the right thing to do is, you are bad at history.
A different idea, if you want to encourage Russians to desert, is just to provide fairly luxurious conditions for Russian POW's. Give them comfortable accommodations, good food, recreational facilities, etc., and then publicize the hell out of that.
How would Ukraine manage to do that?
“If you are 100% certain what the right thing to do is, you are bad at history.”
We’ve always been at war with Eurasia.
If you can't see the fact that the Russian government, simply by viewing their actions, not based on anything the US says, is one of the greatest forces of evil on the planet, I can't help you.
I’m not particularly interested in greatest evil math as it has an remarkable tendency to devolve into special pleading exercises.
Yeap
Or more quickly and at a gain, not a cost, that damn fool in the White House could unleash the American energy sector and put Russia out of business.
But what are a few million lives compared to the fantasies of the squad and the green new inflation machine?
Why did people take that bitch from Sweden seriously?
Boy if Lincoln had a similar idea (in his case pay slaveholders to free their slaves or pay johnny reb to stop fighting)...who knows?
The longer this conflict goes the more Putin will escalate..he has no choice at this point, victory or he will be disposed. Which is why it is very dangerous right now. Civilians are not going to be a concern if they are close to a military target at this point. And we don't need some crazy neolib/neocon intervention here. Man will those folks just go away for good. They helped pave the road for Putin after the cold war..
Compensated emancipation was indeed floated. It never was really tried in the U.S. antebellum, largely because the (people in power in the) South really liked slavery.
Yeahell, I agree with the sentiments, but it's like the people making these proposals don't actually know… people. If you bribe people into making anti-war videos, that will simply discredit the anti-war videos. Even making it optional will not change the fact that people were bribed to make the videos.
That was not some weird passive-aggressive comment; it was just supposed to say "Yeah, not Yeahell."
"The ideology of liberal democracy ultimately triumphed over communism. It can also prevail over Putin's brutal authoritarian nationalism."
Putin = bad, but that's not the same as saying the flavor of "liberal democracy" on tap in the West today is good.
Here's the 18th-century author Emmerich de Vattel, an authority on the law of nations - see if you recognize any current regime in his description:
"Here then is an infallible criterion, by which the nation may judge of the intentions of those who govern it. If they endeavour to render the great and the common people virtuous, their views are pure and upright; and you may rest assured that they solely aim at the great end of government — the happiness and glory of the nation. But if they corrupt the morals of the people, spread a taste for luxury, effeminacy, a rage for licentious pleasures — if they stimulate the higher orders to a ruinous pomp and extravagance — beware, citizens! beware of those corruptors! they only aim at purchasing slaves in order to exercise over them an arbitrary sway."
https://oll-resources.s3.us-east-2.amazonaws.com/oll3/store/titles/2245/Vattel_1379_Bk.pdf
Maybe with gas approaching $5/gallon and inflation at almost 10% we ought to be more concerned about what is happening to America and our own people first before sticking our nose in a regional conflict half the world away because some international elites think Putin = bad.
In this case the best policy for improving conditions in the US, and opposing Putin, are the same: Stop deliberately suppressing US energy production.
I think there are a lot more than just the elites that think Putin is bad. Our parents and grandparents gave up a lot to stop the axis powers during WWII. Complaining about gas prices seems a bit petty.
One thing that should be clear to us is that energy dependence on a single country is a bad idea. Better to take the hit now and work to change this problem, than to leave it hanging over our heads.
Putin is not Hitler. This is one of the dumbest comparisons ever made on the entire internet.
Problem is we won't use the occasion to fix our energy dependence problem. This just means everyone will have an economic hardship which will just make life suck more for awhile.
I wasn't talking about Hitler. I was making the point that during WWII people in this country made sacrifices. We are not asked to do much. No sending soldiers, no meatless Mondays, no rationing, etc. Just accept a little higher gas prices to support the Ukrainians.
This is not just a problem of our energy dependence, we need robust energy supplies for the world.
Or it ain't our problem so people don't need to suffer. No one needs to spend their life savings to get a tank of gas so they go about their regular business because of a stupid regional conflict on the other side of the world.
"Putin is not Hitler."
If you mean Putin is not about to commit genocide, I agree. But his "special operation" in Ukraine sure reminds me of Hitler's forays into neighboring countries with German minorities (which precipitated WWII and caused millions of lives).
"cost millions of lives"
But, hey, he is getting rid of nazis. Isn't that good?
It is absolutely disgusting that so called "Professor" Eugene Volokh has DONE ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to help the USA address the increasingly common issue of cyberstalking and online harassment.
Rather, Eugene Volokh has tried his best to HARM victims of cyberstalking by trying to argue, incorrectly and foolishly, that online harassment and cyberstalking is "Free Speech".
Eugene Volokh, in his many "papers", completely ignores the impact of cyberbullying, cyber-harassment, doxing, and stalking to the VICTIMS of malicious mentally-ill cyberstalkers and sociopaths. Instead, he works hard to protect the rights of these mentally ill criminals and leave victims with no legal recourse to regain their lives and stop this atrocious behaviour. Eugene basically supports the criminals.
Who in their right mind thinks "Free Speech" should be abused by plainly malicious individuals who are often mentally ill and are purposely using the internet to harm the victims by revealing private, personal information (doxing) or slandering them online, or posting their personal private pictures?
Rather than help the courts in the USA understand that cyberharassment is NOT protected speech, Eugene Volokh has taken money ("bribes") from Google, Big Tech to peddle the false notion that harassment websites dedicated to tormenting a victim are "Free Speech" and "one-to-many speech."
Plainly, Eugene Volokh's First Amendment absolutism is dangerous for America because it allows cyberstalking, cyberharassment, doxing, and online abuse to flourish, totally ignoring the social harm of this type of criminal behaviour. Eugene Volokh seems blind to the reality that Free Speech especially on the internet needs to be balanced against other "rights", such as a victim's right to be free from harassment, right to be left alone, right of privacy.
Sadly, Eugene Volokh completely (and purposefully) ignores the impact of these crimes to the hapless victims. He doesn't understand the nature of the internet yet poses as if he's some "First Amendment" expert.
Eugene also tries to make it as difficult as possible for cyberharassment victims to file a civil suit against their perpetrators using a "pseudonym", to protect their privacy from even further harm. Rather than sympathizing with the unfortunate and undeserved situation of the victims and finding ways to help these people stop their attackers, Eugene dishonestly tries to argue that for the victim to file pseudonymously would be somehow "unfair" to the malicious defendant, a psychopath who DESERVES to be held accountable for his criminal and harassing behaviour.
Eugene Volokh reminds me of a wolf in sheep's clothing. He has an agenda - to de-regulate Big Tech so they can maximize profits at the expense of making Americans totally unprotected from cyber-harassment, doxing, and cyber-stalking by mentally ill individuals online. He probably gets a cut of this profit, at the expense of American victims of cyber-stalking.
Try and refute me, Eugene Volokh. Everything I said was fact.
Worst of all, Eugene has attempted to DELETE and CENSOR my truthful posts ABOUT him as he found it "harassing", while denying the same recourse to thousands of REAL online harassment victims across the country and protecting the rights of their harassers. Volokh has deleted several of my HONEST posts here exposing him for his lies and inconsistencies.
So Eugene has exposed his dishonesty and bias - if someone posts TRUTHFUL information ABOUT him that casts him in an unfavourable light, he WANTS it CENSORED, but when it happens to millions of other Americans, he claims they DO NOT deserve legal recourse and that the postings are FREE SPEECH.
Eugene, you need to own up to your mistakes and come out and tell the courts and legal community that online harassment, doxing, cyber-stalking is NOT protected speech, and that Congress needs to make better laws TODAY to protect victims of these new tech-enabled crimes.
You need to stop taking money and bribes from Google and start finding ways to regulate Big Tech to protect Americans from harm.
Your point?
Freedoms can be abused.
Solution is not to limit freedoms.
Prof. Somin supports anything that increases immigration to the U.S.
I've heard comments from people who have family ties in both Russia and the Ukraine, and they ALL have mixed opinions on the war. Problems go back hundreds of years. In 2014 there was a major attack by Ukranian Nationalists on the provincal capitol in Odessa, killing many. There is a huge censorship issue with much false news on all sides. President Zelensky has been broadcasting from a Polish American embassy. Research how Zelensky went from comedian to wealthy President. Some Ukranian Nationalists (a minor percentage of Ukrainians) are on a crime rampage, and blaming it on the Russians. This war sounds more like a U.S. client state becoming a Russian client state.
Some say Putin operates a Mafia-like state. And the U.S. has destabilized how many governments in the past 70 years? Obviously, there is more than one Narrative, the Holomodor, the Ukranian Nationalists and resulting Holocaust, the globalist money manipulators influencing social change moving $40 trillion in various funds and government agencies, etc. Learn all Narratives.
Your handle probably should've been ignoranceandstupidity.
"...the Ukranian Nationalists and resulting Holocaust..."
Some Ukrainians helped the invading Germans perpetrate the Holocaust. And that makes Putin's current invasion OK . . . how exactly?
This sounds great, and it might work for diplomats who are currently stationed in friendly countries. But how are you going to get this for military staff or Kremlin staff and military officers.
First, you need to get the offer to these people, and they have to be able to ask enough questions or get enough details to know it's realistic. Second, if they do want to take the West up, just how the hell are they supposed to get out of Russia? It seems the world is a little short of Moscow-Washington flights right now. And if you had this, the moment someone started looking like they were making moves to leave, you can expect they'll end up in a gulag.
Honestly, about the best thing about this plan would be if Kremlin officers start thinking others may leave. A high degree of distrust and fear will discourage them from giving the type of accurate assessments one needs to make the best strategy decisions. Salem didn't need any witches; it just needed a few people thinking that others were witches.
This is Russia we're discussing.
Does Somin understand that?
The obvious Russian defense to such a strategy would be to immediately execute the families of any deserters.
What would that accomplish, unless he publicized it so that the present and potential future deserters were aware of it? And if he did that, then other Russians would also find out he was executing families, which would backfire. He might arrest families, but he would not execute them.
Russian history shows no such concern over "backfires".
When you need to solve the problem, you solve the problem.
"uncivilized" is a difficult concept to analyze, because we presume there is no such thing. That all cultures are civilized, but some have either temporary or minor breaches which can be confronted.
We fail to understand Russia, (and Islam) because we can't imagine just how different they really are.
No, that's not true. Putin goes to great effort to craft a message for his domestic audience.
Ilya never met a problem he didn't think could be solved by dissolving the borders and welcoming a billion immigrants into the US.
Millions could be dying and these Nimrods would still push their favorite hobby-horse open borders. What's in it for them? We want the people who oppose Putin and his war IN Russia, not outside of it.
No doubt Somin also wants to invide African doctors here too - it's not like they're needed in their own countries. I know just a little about psychopathology, but I don't yet understand the open border obsession. Can it be that it's just a matter of keeping wages down for the lower classes? God knows stock prices rise when wages go down.
However successful this proposal might be in disrupting Russia's efforts, I have to think most opportunists who would sell out under these terms would be "on our side" in the same sense as a battlefield mercenary, only until they get a better offer.
That would mean that the Kremlin is only paying about $104.44 to the families of soldiers killed in action which seems really low. Putin announced that the families of Russian soldiers killed in the Ukraine will be paid 41,228 euros.