Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 7 – What may become a
central plank in Moscow’s propaganda about and policy toward Ukraine has now emerged
with a Russian analyst arguing that the West should accept as final and
legitimate Moscow’s annexation of Crimea because Vladimir Putin is showing such
restraint elsewhere in Ukraine.
Anton Chablin points out that the
Russian Federation Council at Putin’s urging has withdrawn its authorization
for the use of Russian force in Ukraine, that Putin has met with the Ukrainian
president, and that the Kremlin leader has put forward plans for “de-escalating
the conflict” (kavpolit.com/articles/jastreby_kruzhat_nad_krymom-6864/).
But despite such good and restrained
behavior by the Russian president, Chablin continues, “’hawks’ in Brussels and
at the Pentagon” continue to challenge Russia’s annexation of Crimea as illegitimate
and seek to reverse it through the use of sanctions, non-recognition policies,
and other means. Why should they given how well Putin is behaving elsewhere.
At one level, this argument is
simply absurd. Putin wants the West to accept his illegal Anschluss of Crimea
because he hasn’t occupied any other part of Ukraine at least not for the
present. If any other world leader or
child asked to be excused for one bad action because he hadn’t committed
another, that request would be laughed out of court as it were.
But Putin has typically been able to
rely on double standards: he and his regime are not held to the same standards
as others. Instead, they are held if at all to much lower ones. And consequently, the notion that his
occupation of Crimea should be accepted as a way out of the crisis because he
hasn’t occupied Donetsk and Luhansk may very well find support.
At least some in the West may view
this as a way out for Putin at home and a way to avoid a continuing confrontation
between Moscow and the West. Putin
currently is under heavy criticism from many Russians for not dispatching the
Russian army to help pro-Russian separatists in Donetsk and Luhansk against
Ukrainian forces.
If the Kremlin leader can get the
West to recognize his annexation of Crimea, he can argue that his Ukrainian
adventure constitutes a victory for Russia and for himself, simultaneously
silencing his opponents on the Novorossiya issue and perhaps winning even more
support from the Russian population.
And if Moscow and the West can come
to at least an implicit trade-off between Russia’s backing off in eastern
Ukraine and the West’s backing off on Crimea, relations between Russia and the
West can return to “normal,” with gas and trade resuming and more rounds of
meetings between a supposedly chastened Putin and Western leaders rescheduled.
In an era when profits trump
principles, when quick fixes are valued over longer-term solutions and when so
many officials and experts have linked their careers to cooperation with
Moscow, such an approach is likely to find many takers in Western capitals and
on Western editorial pages.
But there are three compelling
reasons why Western countries must reject it.
First, Putin’s Anschluss of Crimea is the first annexation of territory
by a European country since World War II.
If it is allowed to stand or worse to be accepted, there will be other
instances of this kind of crime in the future – including quite possibly by
Putin’s Russia itself
Second, helping Putin in this way
with his domestic opponents won’t transform him into a democratic reformer.
Instead, it will allow him to gain even higher approval ratings among Russians
for a “victory” over the West and thus to pursue with the ostensible blessing
of the Russian people his ever more authoritarian and obscurantist course.
And third and most important, even
if it is not the most compelling argument in some policy circles, Putin’s
aggression in Crimea is and remains wrong.
It must be denounced because it is wrong, and a policy must be put in
place to underscore that reality even if it cannot be reversed quickly.
One of the most admirable and
ultimately successful US policies ever was its non-recognition of the illegal
occupation of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania by the Soviet Union as a result of
the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact signed when Hitler and Stalin were allies and which
opened the way to World War II in Europe.
It took half a century for
non-recognition policy to achieve its goals. But next month, the three Baltic
countries will mark the 75th anniversary of that criminal deal between
dictators, and they will do so as full members of the European Union and NATO.
It would be a sad commentary on our times if we were snookered by Putin into
taking a less forthright stand now.
No comments:
Post a Comment