Paul
Goble
Staunton, April
8 – The United States and the West must put in place an updated version of the
non-recognition policy they applied to the Soviet occupation of Estonia, Latvia
and Lithuania to underscore our outrage at the use of Russian brute force in
Ukraine to annex part or all of a neighboring state and to show that we will
never recognize the results of such force.
By doing so, we would be sending a
powerful message that such actions put those who engage in them beyond the pale
and that we will stand with the victims, for decades if that is what it takes,
to see their independence recovered and their freedom restored. Such steps
impose a badge of shame on the aggressors and a badge of honor for the victims
and the West.
The need for such a clearly
articulated policy is clear. US State Department officials have already said
that the United States will never recognize Russia’s occupation of Crimea, but
such statements will have little or no meaning if US government agencies act as
if Crimea were already part of the Russian Federation.
Tragically, that
appears to be happening. A map issued by
the Voice of America this week shows Crimea to be no longer part of Ukraine.
While it doesn’t specify that Crimea is part of the Russian Federation, the
colors used suggest that that is what the mapmaker thinks is the case (bbgwatch.com/bbgwatch/crimea-no-longer-part-of-ukraine-on-voice-of-america-map/).
There is a very good way to prevent
this from happening, and it is one Washington had 50 years of experience with:
a non-recognition policy with respect to Soviet occupation of Estonia, Latvia
and Lithuania that was not simply declarative but that had real content,
including but not limited to statements on US government maps that the US did
not recognize the forcible incorporation of the three into the USSR.
When Stalin, on the basis of the
secret protocols of his Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact with Hitler, occupied the
Baltic countries in 1940, he used many of the same tactics Vladimir Putin has employed
in Crimea. And many in the West assumed there was nothing we could do to
reverse this aggression, that we had to get used to it, look at “the bigger
picture” and move on.
But some American officials, led by
Loy Henderson of the State Department, realized how dangerous and subversive of
American interests that would be. Drawing on the 1930 Stimson Doctrine which
rejected any border changes created by force alone, Henderson argued that the
US could not recognize what the Soviets had done in the Baltics.
He was backed by President Franklin
Roosevelt, and the policy, which involved maintaining ties with the diplomats
of the pre-war governments, not allowing senior US officials to travel to these
occupied countries, and indications on all government maps that the US did not
recognize their occupation, among other things formally lasted until 1991.
Throughout those
50 years, the flags of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania flew at the State
Department -- and all US government-produced maps indicated that Washington did
not recognize their incorporation by the Soviet Union. Despite the evolving relationship between
the US and the USSR, such measures served to inspire those living under the
occupation that they would one day again be free.
Equally important, these measures
represented as a badge of honor for the United States, an indication that
principles matter and that small countries must never be sacrificed by large
ones in the name of the bigger picture or because standing up for them might
anger the dictators who rule some large ones.
US non-recognition policy did not
achieve its final aims until 1991, just over 50 years after it was articulated.
In the current media and political climate, it might not have lasted that long,
given the ever shorter attention spans of publics and politicians and a 24/7
news cycle which asks why hasn’t something been solved before the second
commercial.
But work it did. Estonians, Latvians
and Lithuanians were inspired by this, they achieved their independence earlier
and in a quite different way than did the Soviet republics, they are
well-functioning democracies with free market economies, and they are now proud
members of NATO and the European Union.
Non-recognition policy was not the
only factor involved, but it played a role.
And now there is a very real need for a new non-recognition policy, one
that makes it very clear, not only in occasional official statements but on
maps and in diplomatic practice that the US and the West as a whole will never recognize
the forcible incorporation of Crimea into the Russian Federation.
Maps as always are a good place to
start: the VOA map should be redrawn and replaced with one that shows the true
facts of the case: Another dictator has occupied part of the territory of neighboring
state, and the Western democracies won’t ever recognize or forget that
aggression, however long it takes.
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