Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 17 – Russian President
Vladimir Putin plans not only to annex other portions of Ukraine following the
Crimean Anschluss but to set up a pro-Russian government in Kyiv, according to
Andrei Illarionov, who once was an economic advisor to the Kremlin leader but
now is an outspoken critic.
In an interview on a Ukrainian Internet
television channel, Illarionov says that
Putin decided to retake Ukraine some years ago, has worked out a detailed
program to do so, and is currently drawing up a new constitution for Ukraine
that he intends to impose on that independent country (youtube.com/watch?v=bjWlJ2G_di0).
That constitution, the Russian
economist said, will call for a Moscow-defined federalization of Ukraine, one
that will allow each of that country’s regions to have its own foreign
relations, the disarmament of the country and a formal and permanent
renunciation by Kyiv of any interest in NATO membership.
Some elements of the current
Ukrainian government are prepared to go along with some or all of this as the
price of remaining a nominally independent country. Asked how Putin could achieve all this given
Western “guarantees” to Ukraine, Illarionov replied in obvious puzzlement: “What
strange people you are” to believe such words will save Ukraine.
When US President Barack Obama told
Putin that the US was not prepared to use military force to block Moscow on
Crimea, Putin viewed this as an indication that the West would not challenge
him in any serious way and was in fact “in ordinary language,” saying “’take it’”
and showing that the Budapest Accords were a dead letter.
Indeed, Illarionov says, this
exchange can be said to constitute the “Munich agreement of 2014.”
Any country which wants to defend
its independence must be prepared to resist an aggressor, Illarionov
continues. There are many ways to do so,
but assuming that someone else will do the job has never worked. Countries that resist like Finland and
Georgia can survive; those that don’t like Czechoslovakia in 1938 will not.
Although it has not taken the
necessary steps over the last three weeks, Kyiv still has the choice: It can be
a Finland or Georgia, or it will become a Czechoslovakia, Illarionov says. And
those who think that passivity will allow a country to avoid human losses need
to look at the historical record.
The future of Russian-occupied
Crimea is grim, Illarinov says. The Crimean Tatars are likely to be expelled
because “changing the ethnic composition of the Crimean peninsula” is clearly
one of Moscow’s goals. As has happened
before, the Crimean Tatars have been “abandoned,” they are “hostages” to
Moscow, and they are thus expendable.
According to Illarionov, Ukrainians
and the West must not put their hopes in any regime change in Russia itself
anytime soon. That may happen
eventually, but today under Putin, Russia has a “brutal authoritarian political
regime,” one that may survive for some time.
In his concluding remarks, the Russian
commentator says that the imposition of sanctions no matter how tough will not
force Moscow to withdraw from Crimea. Ukraine must resist, and Ukrainians must
recognize that the Maidan succeeded when those who took part in it showed that
they were prepared to die in place rather than to give up on their cause.
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