Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 31 – In 1991, when
the Soviet Union was living out its last days, a cartoon appeared in an
American newspaper which perfectly captured the spirit of what was happening in
Moscow and in the West. It showed Mikhail Gorbachev holding a gun to his head
and saying “If you try to stop me, I’ll shoot myself.”
Fears in some Western capitals that
any “pressure” on Gorbachev, even after he ordered the killings in Lithuania
and Latvia, might lead to the collapse of his regime and even the
disintegration of the Soviet Union certainly acted as a constraint on those
governments, although they did not prevent Gorbachev from being ousted and the
USSR from falling apart.
Now, according to former Ukrainian
foreign minister Vladimir Ogryzko, some in the West are infected with similar
fears that any imposition of serious sanctions on Vladimir Putin for his aggression
in Ukraine could lead to the collapse of his regime and his country (nv.ua/opinion/ogryzko/slabye-sankcii-zapada-shag-k-ocherednomu-mariupolyu-32042.html).
Commenting on the decision of the EU
to keep existing sanctions in place and its promise to toughen them “if the
situation deteriorates,” Ogryzko says that this position has both positive and
negative aspects. On the positive side, it shows that Moscow’s hopes for a Greek
veto on the extension of sanctions were misplaced.
But on the negative side, he points
out that “unfortunately, the EU sanctions have turned out to be quite weak and
are not hitting Russia as they should after all that has happened. What is
especially disturbing are the comments of some that the EU may do more if
Moscow launches a frontal attack on Mariupol or other Ukrainian cities.”
“It seems to me,” the Ukrainian diplomat
says, “that this goes beyond all possible and impossible limits. After the
terrorist acts in Vonovakha, Donetsk and especially in Mariupol to speak about
the introduction of sanctions ‘in the event that the situation deteriorates’ is
simply to help the aggressor” because it gives Moscow no reason to stop.
“The reason behind such weak
decisions,” he continues, “is that people in the West fear an instantaneous
collapse of Russia which would be completely possible if serious economic
sanctions were introduced,” sanctions like the exclusion of Russia from the
SWIFT banking settlement system.
Various
Russian commentators have suggested that more serious sanctions could lead to a
Russian collapse. And “apparently,” Ogryzko says, “the economic interests of
the West do not allow it to take this step. Now, [its member governments] will
wait until the latest ‘if,’ the next Mariupol, the next attack of Russian
forces.”
No comments:
Post a Comment