Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 27 – Yesterday, Yuri
Lutsenko, the leader of the Poroshenko Bloc in the Verkhova Rada, said that the
probability of the renewal of military actions in eastern Ukraine was “more
than 80 percent,” a statement that underscores analyst Andrey Illarionov’s argument
in Tallinn that “there is no non-military solution” for the war now going on in
Ukraine.
Speaking on Inter television,
Lutsenko said that pro-Moscow forces in eastern Ukraine were now at the highest
level of readiness for an attack they had ever been since Vladimir Putin
launched his intervention in Ukraine and that it seems clear that “the fighters
are preparing for an attack (pravda.com.ua/rus/news/2015/04/26/7065949/).
Meanwhile, speaking at the Lennart
Meri Conference in the Estonian capital, Illarionov argued that the war in
Ukraine will end only as the result of the use of force: either more by Russia
or by Ukraine backed by the West (rus.postimees.ee/3169319/illarionov-v-voennom-rossijsko-ukrainskom-protivostojanii-net-nevoennogo-reshenija).
In support of his argument, the
Russian analyst pointed to the very different outcomes in Putin’s war against
Georgia in 2008 and his current aggression against Ukraine. In August 2008, US
President George W. Bush moved American forces toward Georgia, a step that “helped
stop the Georgian war.”
But, he continued, “President Barack
Obama on February 27-28, 2014, excluded the use of force when Russia began the seizure
of Crimea.” That constituted “a clear signal” to Putin that the West would not
act and that he could continue to pursue with impunity his aggression against
Ukraine more generally.
According to Illarionov, “Putinis
seeking to restore the war established in 1945 in Yalta and Potsdam,” a world
in which the big powers can “ignore small states” and act according to a system
in which whatever any one of the great powers can act in the same way that another
great power does.
“If the US does something,” in this
view, “then Russia immediately acquires the right to do the same thing. If the
US uses military force, Russia can use it as well. If the West recognizes
Kosovo, then Russia gains the right to recognize Abkhazia and South Osetia” –
and so on, Illarionov suggests.
In his
remarks, the Russian analyst made two additional points worthy of note. On the
one hand, he said, “Putin is dividing Europe in two: the Anglo-Saxon countries
and the so-called front line states (the Baltics, Romania and Poland) who are
enemies which must be subordinated, and the countries of continental Europe who
are friends.”
And on the other
hand, Illarionov said, “there is no other leader who has been using so any
different means” to achieve his ends: military, economic, information,
terrorist and so on. Putin has combined the all and with great success: By
offering deals to the Europeans, he has succeeded in creating a situation in
which almost no one talks about Crimea anymore.
In today’s “Yezhednevny
zhurnal,” Aleksandr Golts suggests that the discussions at the Lennart Meri
Conference may point to dramatic changes in the West’s response to Russia’s
actions in Ukraine, changes that Moscow has brought on itself by its actions
and will have no one but itself to blame (ej.ru/?a=note&id=27603).
The Russian
analyst noted that at the conference there were repeated calls for NATO to
immediately make Ukraine a member of the alliance as “the only chance to stop
Russian aggression.” Given that Moscow moved in Ukraine to prevent that from
happening, “this nightmare” of the Kremlin is “becoming a reality.”
And that is hardly the only place
where the participants in the Lennart Meri Conference pointed to more changes
ahead. NATO has already agreed to put NATO
forces in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania on a rotating basis. At the conference,
Estonian President Toomas Hendrik Ilves argued that having permanent NATO bases
there should follow.
Those who think that the NATO-Russia
treaty precludes this, Ilves said, are misinterpreting that agreement. And Golts said that he “suspects that the
time when the alliance will agree” with President Ilves’ interpretation is “not
far distant,” another way in which Moscow has produced by its actions exactly
what it said it was taking them to prevent.
“Finally,” Golts writes, “in the
course of the conference were expressed some truly revolutionary ideas. For
example, about depriving the permanent members of the UN Security Council of a
veto when they are involved in direct aggression and thus to create the
possibility for their punishment.”
“Of course,” the Moscow author says,
“it is quite easy to ignore all that was said at the conference in Tallinn. [NB:
He spelled the Estonian capital with two N’s, not one, as Russians typically
do.] What won’t these arrant Russophobes from the Baltics say! Only I suspect,”
Golts continues, “this is the first attempt to respond to Russia’s actions in
Ukraine.” [NB: Here he uses “na” as Putin prefers rather than “v” as Ukrainians
do.]
Note: The author of these lines presented the Lennart
Meri lecture to this conference via Skype. It was entitled “Restoring or
Renewing the Post-1991 Order: What are the Prospects?” I will be happy to send
a copy to anyone who requests one by writing me at paul.goble@gmail.com.
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