Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 28 – Russian aggression
in Ukraine has opened a new divide in the West between those who take freedom
for granted and those who know that it must be defended or it can be lost,
according to Vladimir Vyatrovich, the director of the Ukrainian Institute of
National Memory.
Many in the West have come to take
their freedoms as a given, but Ukraine has shown that freedom has a price and
must be defended or it will be lost, the Kyiv historian says. That is “an
extraordinarily important” lesson for today when some are offering security or
the illusion of imperial greatness in exchange for it (nr2.com.ua/blogs/RIA_new_region_ukraine/Istorik-Vladimira-Putina-mozhno-ostanovit-tolko-v-Ukraine-85559.html).
The world needs to recognize that “what
is taking place now is not a war between Ukraine and Russia and not an internal
Ukrainian conflict. It is a struggle between European liberal-democratic values
and the Soviet ones on which Putin operates.” And it needs to recognize as well
that the first are directly threatened by the second.
Putin has made it clear that his
ambitions include “the restoration of influence in the borders of the USSR. If
he succeeds in subordinating [Ukraine], then his next target will be the Baltic
countries.” Consequently, he has to be
stopped in Ukraine before he attacks countries already in NATO and the European
Union.
In his campaign in Ukraine, Vyatrovich says, Putin has relied on much drawn
from Soviet propaganda in the past. That is a source of strength for him as
many in Ukraine and elsewhere still live according to those values. But it is also his weakness because “this
idea is retrograde and does not have anything in common with the present.”
Ukraine’s
efforts to rethink the Soviet past and move toward a different future is thus a
direct challenge to Russia not only because “the rebirth of the USSR is
possible only if Kyiv participates” but also because “the condemnation of the
crimes of the communist past acquires an entirely different sound if Ukraine
joins in that.”
“It is naïve to
hope that if another ruler replaces Putin, Russia will change,” the Kyiv
historian says. Putin is “playing on the imperial ambitions of Russia,” not
creating something which did not exist. Unlike other former imperial powers,
Russians have not gone beyond them and come to view empire as a burden rather
than a value.
Ukrainians have never been as
committed to subordinating themselves to the authorities and the tsar as
Russians have. “On the contrary, Ukrainians have always struggled against any
power,” something that has opened the way to the possibility of change but has
also added certain difficulties to that process.
Former Ukrainian president Viktor
Yanukovich failed precisely because he operated on Russian assumptions, something
that provoked a rising against him and ultimately his loss of power, Vyatrovich
argues.
This divide between Ukrainian and
Russian values also helps to explain separatism in the east of Ukraine. As a
result of Soviet policies, many Ukrainians who had been living there lost their
lives and their places were taken by “workers from Russia during the period of
industrialization. As a result, the
culture there from the beginning was Soviet.”
That pattern was compounded in
Soviet times by Moscow’s subsidies to the Donbas, and the end of those
subsidies has left the population with lower incomes and a sense drawn from the
Moscow television channels it still watches that everything is still wonderful
in Russia. All that has worked to
preserve Soviet culture there.
But Ukrainian influence has been sufficiently strong in places like
Kharkiv and Odessa that Putin’s plans to create a collection of “peoples
republics” in Ukraine has collapsed.
Ukrainians
cannot rely on that alone, however, the historian says. “The main lesson of history for Ukraine is
that in order to oppose an aggressor, the citizens and the authorities must
unite.” Only by so doing, he continues, can Ukraine avoid risings within its
own territory when as they must things get tough.
“Now,”
Vyatrovich argues, “Russia is interested in preserving an enclave beyond the
control of the Ukrainian authorities,” and it is thus using exactly the same
scenario it employed earlier in Georgia.
And it is using tactics extremely similar to those the Bolsheviks used
in Ukraine in 1918-1919.
Those
include many that are now called “hybrid war:” the creation of parallel
governments, military formations supported by the Bolsheviks, and an enormous
propaganda effort.
Those
were relatively successful at that time, Vyatrovich says, but the situation
today is different. Fortunately, “the Ukrainian state is much stronger and the
level of national consciousness of the people is an order of magnitude higher.”
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