Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 15 – By his invasion
of Crimea, Vladimir Putin has not only unified Ukraine as a nation but is
provoking the West into taking the kind of steps that will not only alienate
many Russians but what is critical many of the chief supporters of his own
power, Vladimir Bukovsky told a Polish radio station.
The kind of sanctions against Russia
that many Western leaders are now talking about will limit the ability of
members of the Russian elite to travel, to educate their children abroad, and
to keep their wealth in foreign banks, he said, adding that “This is no way
will please Putin’s entourage” (charter97.org/ru/news/2014/3/14/90439/
from radyjo.net/4/91/Artykul/165092).
That could lead to a real struggle
in the Kremlin, even to the point of violence against Putin, Bukovsky
continued. The former Soviet dissident
said that one must keep in mind that those around Putin are like a criminal
band, a group that operates according to “the simple principle: the head of the
band works for the band, and the band for him.”
“If this principle is violated” –
and the fallout from Crimea could lead some of the band members to conclude
that – Bukovsky suggested, then the leader is in trouble as are those around
him who may decide that the world that allowed them to “steal for 14 years” and
take the benefits is collapsing around them.
But Putin’s Crimean adventure has
already had another dramatic consequence, Bukovsky said. The Kremlin leader unintentionally
and against his own interests “has achieved that which no one had been able to
do before: he has unified the Ukrainian people” to an extent that no one had
ever done before, despite its ethnic, religious and geographic diversity.
Bukovsky said that at the same time,
Crimea is a test of the international community. “If the great powers cannot keep their
promises, then this will be an enormous blow to their prestige and a step to
the spread of nuclear weapons” to countries which do not know have them, a
development that potentially will have even more serious consequences.
He said that while some in Ukraine,
Poland and Belarus may have expected the West to do more than it has,
nonetheless “the reaction has been much greater than it might have been
possible to hope.” On the basis of his “almost 40 years in the West,” Bukovsky
said he knows that “it is impossible” to expect a clear and sensible Western
response to Russian aggression.
But Russian weaknesses – its military
is in the midst of being reformed and popular support for Putin is the
ephemeral result of a massive propaganda effort – will soon be highlighted by
those sanctions Western governments are almost certain to impose after the illegitimate
referendum in Crimea.
As that becomes clear -- and it will -- those who
back Putin now will turn away from him, Bukovsky concluded, leaving
the Kremlin leader without the popular support he now claims or the elite
backing on which he or any other Russian leader depends. As a result, the Crimean crisis could mark
the beginning of the end of Putin and Putin’s regime.
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