Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 21 – Every leader carries
around in his or her head a mental map of the world, one that is the basis for
action regardless of whether it corresponds to the actual map or not. Vladimir Putin is no exception, Peter
Oleshchuk says, but his map is especially inadequate because he views the
borders of the world as if they were those before World War I.
“In order to understand the nature
of the current conflict” in Ukraine, the Ukrainian political analyst says, one
must understand Russia’s “imperial worldview which defines in turn Russian
policy in the present-day situation” (nr2.com.ua/News/politics_and_society/Politolog-Dlya-Kremlya-Ukrainy-ne-sushchestvuet-Dazhe-na-karte-88726.html).
On Putin’s mental map, he continues,
“there is no Ukraine.” But there are no other countries between Russia and
Germany. On its map, “there is Germany, there is France, there is Great
Britain, there is Japan. And there are China and the US. But there is no
Ukraine, there is no Belarus, and there is even no Poland. All this is ‘[Russia’s]
immemorial.’”
“Of course,” Oleshchuk continues, “there
are some kind of governments there,” and Moscow “recognizes this fiction.” But
despite that, Russia views all them as belonging to it. “Of if not to [Russia],
then to the Americans or the Chinese.” The key thing is that such places must
belong “to someone” or other but not to their own peoples.
This map, he continues, reflects the
fact that the Kremlin does not view “nations as the subject of politics.
Empires don’t recognize the existence of nations,” and the Russian one is no
exception. There are “great powers,” there are “elites,” and there are “territories
which they control.” But the nations are irrelevant.
Moreover, this map and this
conception mean that “Russia as a ‘big player’ must have its own buffer zone of
satellites” and that “all issues need be decided only with [other big players]”
and not with the peoples of these non-existent states. The West can kill off the Maidan instantly,
Moscow believes, because it created it. The Russian view leaves no role for
Ukrainians.
What all this means, Oleshchuk says,
is that Russia will not stop even though its losses now exceed its potential
benefits because Moscow is “convinced that it has a victory in in its pocket.
There is no Ukraine. The ‘elite’ which controls Ukraine is controlled by them.” And all that is needed is to push the West out of the
way so Moscow can resume its rule over that place.
From this point
of view, he continues, the Kremlin is certain that it “need only ‘show firmness’
so that the Pentagon will understand that the West is dealing with a serious
player.” The game is thus in Washington and Brussels not in the Donbas. Russia
doesn’t understand Ukraine, and this means that “the conflict will be a lengthy
one.”
As inadequate
as this mental map and vision of the world is, it has one great advantage,
although this is not something that the Ukrainian analyst mentions. Moscow’s
vision of a world dominated by great powers in which “the nations in between”
are irrelevant is tragically shared by many in the chancelleries of Europe and
the US.
Those who share
it always claim that they are the true “realists.” In fact, they share with
Putin a fantasy, one for which they like he are likely to pay a high price even
though even more tragically the nations in between may again be forced to pay
an even higher one because of such mistaken views.
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