Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 17 – Modest
Kolerov, an outspoken champion of Russian nationalism and expansion, says that the
expert community in Moscow has still not decided on what would be best for a
world “after Ukraine” but that in his opinion, “the best scenario for [Russians]
would be a freezing of the conflict.”
Kolerov, who is editor of the Regnum
news agency, says that he reaches that conclusion because of his long
experience working with South Osetia, Abkhazia, Transdniestria, and
Nagorno-Karabakh and because of his conviction that “the Ukraine we know today
is [already] a phenomenon of the past” (regnum.ru/news/polit/1895852.html).
The
commentator made this and other declarations at a conference in Novgorod last
week called “Russia and the West: Quo Vadis?” organized by the Russian-Polish
Center for Dialogue, the Friedrich Ebert Foundation in Russia, the Polish
embassy in Russia, the NATO information bureau in Russia, the Polish Institute
in St. Petersburg, the Russia-Baltic Media center, the Danish Embassy in Russia
and the Norwegian consulate general in St. Petersburg.
Kolerov began his address by
insisting that in the future “Ukraine will no longer exist” because “that
Ukraine which we know today is a phenomenon of the past.” Consequently, he argued,
“the life of Eastern Europe and
Eurasia after Ukraine requires an honest approach from the sides participating
in the process.”
“When we will see tomorrow will be a
different phenomenon, another Ukraine. We no longer can discuss the history of
Ukraine and its interests,” Kolerov says. Those have been “sacrificed to those
who sponsored, organized and continue to organize coups” against legitimate
governments as was the case with the Maidan.
According to the Regnum editor, “we
must discuss what each of the sides – Germany, the EU and Poland sees as the
immediate future of this territory,” but up to now, he insists, “not one of the
sides has a model or image of the future of Eastern Europe after Ukraine.” Nor,
Kolerov acknowledges, is there “any precise understanding … of the future after
Ukraine.”
He says that
Russian policy toward Crimea, the Donbas and other territories of Eastern
Ukraine “has been reactive … We know that all the previous policy of Russia
toward Ukraine … was dictated” not by a considered examination of Russian
national interests but by Moscow’s deference to the insistence of the West on
what he calls “a dynastic policy.”
As a result,
until February 2014, Russia had been “losing in Ukraine.” Indeed, Kolerov says,
“its entire 25-year-long policy toward Ukraine” had been a failure.
Throughout that
period, he says, “Ukraine through the efforts of all administrations was
formally pro-Russian was in fact anti-Russian and pro-Western, and “consistently
pursued a firm course involving ‘the rehabilitation of pro-Hitler, Banderite
collaborationism which is now its official ideology.”
Last year, Russia
adopted a new course in “a series of impromptu steps in Crimea, in the Donbas,
and in relation to Ukraine as a whole.” In every case, Kolerov insists, Moscow
was defending itself against the attacks of others. But now the question
arises: “What model of the Russia does Russia want to achieve” regarding
Ukraine?
There is no clear
answer to this up to now, he says. “There are attempts to combine principles of
various kinds: the integrity of Ukraine, the federalization of Ukraine, the
right of the east of Ukraine to self-determination, military security of Russia
in connection with the expansion of NATO into Ukraine which undoubtedly will
occur.”
The only thing on
which Russians agree and about which there can be no discussion is the status
of Crimea as part of the Russian Federation, Kolerov says. “A retreat in Crimea would mark the death of
Russian statehood and the national suicide of our people,” he argues. “Everyone
must understand this.”
According to
Kolerov, “the Minsk agreements will not be observed in the first instance by
the West.” And he argues that the West will continue to seek to weaken Russia
by moving against it elsewhere in the post-Soviet space and in particular in
Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, Belarus, and Armenia.
The Regnum editor
says that the EU and the US will undoubtedly seek to “impose on the region the
economic model of shock therapy” and to displace Russian influent with their
own by expanding NATO just as they have already done in the Baltic
countries. But, Kolerov concludes, all
this is in the interests only of the US and not of Europe.
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