Yes, he rolled the dice for some practical reasons, but mostly to
restore what Hitler would describe as a natural Russian border. Yet
it was an emotional call. This is land given to the Ukraine under
the sovient dispensation and it is just one more act of Soviet
stupididy.
What is needed is a treaty making process entered into by Russia and
NATO in which Russia accepts that things have changed and it is time
to settle all mutual borders in congenial manner. Had the Cold War
been a hot war, we would have had an armitice, a cooling off periood
and then a sober treaty.
There are contentious issues, many of which no longer even matter to
the russians, yet still need a stamp of approval and historic
acceptance. It would be nice to have Germany formally renounce any
historic claims and fully accept post war forced settlements. The
Poles and actually all the successor States need this sort of
historic treaty with Russia as a signatory or one of the God Parents.
My point is that there is ample unfinished business that needs to be
almost signed off on.
This provides the framwork to then resolve really contentious issues
of which the Crimea was obvious. Yet what this process can also do
is establish a Royal Road for Russia to join the European community
as a full pazartner. Then all the historic economic concerns that
drove Russian militancy for centuries will simply disapate.
The russian military can also be modernized up to NATO standards and
the russian Rail system can perhaps be made over to standard Gauge
with a subsidy program.
All this frees Russia up to properly cleaning up the russian economy
as well. And finishes a job now well begun.
Putin has trapped
himself in a quagmire of his own making
The Globe and Mail
Published Friday, Aug.
08 2014, 7:00 PM EDT
Russian President
Vladimir Putin may be bluffing: Those thousands of troops on the
Ukrainian border could be there to intimidate, to pressure and to
provoke. He may have no intention of openly sending his army into
Ukraine. Then again, he may not be bluffing at all. It is entirely
possible that Mr. Putin will invade in the coming days. Why might he
do this? Because there is a war being fought on the
Ukrainian side of the border, which Mr. Putin fomented, armed and
encouraged – and, to his surprise, he is losing.
A few months ago,
Ukraine’s armed forces appeared disorganized, discouraged and riven
with dissent and bickering. But over the past few weeks, they have
seized the upper hand in fighting with the rebels, pushing them back
toward the Russian border. The Russian-inspired insurgency,
equipped and partly composed of men sent from Moscow, has not been
spreading. It has instead been isolated and rolled back.
Mr. Putin may be a
strongman, but he is playing from a position of weakness. The Russian
leader has discovered, to his great embarrassment, that he is far
less powerful than the Soviet leaders he admires. He has been unable
to push or pull the Kiev government back into Moscow’s orbit. His
proxies on the ground in eastern Ukraine, well armed but neither
numerous nor popular, are facing military defeat.
He gobbled up Crimea,
but is losing the remainder of Ukraine to the West.
If Mr. Putin
chooses to strike out, it will be because he is on the verge of a
huge defeat, and a catastrophic loss of face. His only remaining
weapons are, well, weapons.
In Ukraine, Mr.
Putin is losing the propaganda battle, the diplomatic battle and the
economic battle. And he can’t do much on any of those
counts. Russia is not the Soviet Union: It offers no alternative
ideology, like Communism, that appeals to universal principles and
people beyond its borders. His attempts to characterize the current
Ukrainian government as the result of a fascist or even neo-Nazi
coup, bent on persecuting the country’s Russian minority, have
persuaded almost no one, including Russian-speaking Ukrainians.
And Mr. Putin’s plan
to hit back against Western sanctions with sanctions of his own –
this week, announcing a policy of refusing to buy most foodstuffs
from the West – is likely to be self-defeating. Unlike the Soviet
Union, today’s Russia is not the head of a large economic bloc with
a poor but at least largely self-sufficient system, designed to
operate without the need for trade with the more developed West. The
current Russian Federation is tied into the global, post-communist
economy. It needs goods – from foodstuffs to electronics to banking
services – that only the rest of the world, in particular
Americans, Europeans and Canadians, can provide.
Russian citizens are
better off than their Soviet predecessors, who suffered from
shortages of the most basic consumer goods. But the new prosperity is
built on economic interdependence. That trade connection to the rest
of the world enriches post-Soviet consumers, but it comes at a price
for any post-Soviet dictator. It diminishes his independence and room
for manoeuvre. In any case, Russia is an economic pygmy: Its economic
output, barely larger than Canada’s, is dwarfed by that of the
United States and the European Union.
The only place where
Russia is more than a shadow of the Soviet Union is in terms of
military power. Its diplomatic levers are enfeebled. Its ideological
appeal is nil. Its attempts at putting financial pressure on Ukraine
are outweighed by the economic opportunities offered to Ukrainians
through greater integration with the West, and the hope that Ukraine
could one day be free and prosperous like neighbouring Poland. (What
can Moscow offer? That Ukraine will remain as unfree and unprosperous
as Belarus?)
To influence events
across his border, all Mr. Putin may have left is force. He may
resort to the hammer because he has no other tools, and he’s not
willing – or able – to concede defeat.
He’s tried using
force through proxies, equipped by the Kremlin and with manpower in
some cases sent directly from Moscow. With these proxy forces now
losing, the question is whether Mr. Putin will double down on his
bet, by sending in actual Russian soldiers. It would be daring for
him to attempt this, as it would provoke a massive response of
ostracism and boycott from Western countries. But it could even be
more dangerous, from Mr. Putin’s perspective, to not act. It would
be a huge loss of face for Mr. Putin to see the Kiev government
triumph, and to be forced to recognize Ukraine as a fully independent
state.
By setting himself up
as the protector of an allegedly persecuted Russian minority in
Ukraine, willing to defend it against what he claimed was a kind of
fascist Ukrainian regime, Mr. Putin painted himself into a corner.
And in the course of stymieing his goals in Ukraine, the
West must also figure out how to extricate Mr. Putin from that
corner. Because the Russian dictator is a kind of wounded and
cornered animal. That the wounds are self-inflicted and the corner
was of his own design doesn’t change the fact that, as dangerous as
the Russian leader is, he is not playing from a position of strength.
The challenge for
Western diplomats in the days and weeks to come is to discover a way
to let Mr. Putin give us what we want – a democratic, independent
Ukraine, sovereign over its territory and in control of its borders –
without forcing him to lose too much face in the bargain. Mr. Putin
has only one card left. The trick is finding a solution that allows
him to back down, and avoid playing it.
1 comment:
Well, no doubt America will be racing to get missiles and military bases in Ukraine as soon as possible, under the guise of Europe & NATO of course.
How happy would they be if Putin put missile bases on Cuba?
This is not about Russia, this is about giving America control of the Ukraine, making it another puppet like Australia.
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