Paul
Goble
Staunton,
September 16 – Many foreign leaders have offered diagnoses of Vladimir Putin
and his regime – Germany’s Angela Merkel has suggested he is living in an
alternative reality – but few are more qualified to do so than Vaira Vīķe-Freiberga, Latvia’s former president who was trained as a
clinical psychologist and worked in that field for many years.
Thus,
her comments to the Yalta European Strategy Forum in Kyiv last weekend merit
particular attention. Among her most
important observations are the following (nv.ua/publications/psihopaticheskaja-vlast-chto-zhivet-opasnymi-illjuzijami-samaja-otkrovennaja-rech-o-rossii-foruma-jaltinskoj-strategii-68640.html):
“We share a common border with a
psychopathic power, which lives by useless and dangerous illusions,” she
declared. “If you think you can understand the feelings of people with such
psychological attitudes, this is not the case: One mustn’t be sentimental about
the mysterious Russian soul; one must be alert when one lives next to a
psychopath.”
“At the beginning of my career,”
Vike-Freiberga said, “I dealt with such people. I saw what psychopaths and
people with serious psychological illnesses are like. They can change remarkably quickly and begin to shout hysterically. One can expect just such
unexpectedness even from the heads of states.”
Indeed, such people often appear to
gain by being unpredictable, she adds.
In dealing with the world, “we must
hope for the better but be prepared for the worst. We hope that there will be a
world in which we will have good neighbors, sympathetic to our needs, peaceful
and not paranoid in dealing with reality. But we must be alert. And when it is
necessary to defend ourselves, we must decisively oppose any harsh and insane
efforts.”
To defend itself, Ukraine needs more
than the West has given it so far, although the West has done more than one
might have expected, she says. “We in
Latvia feel ourselves secure because we joined NATO. Small in terms of
territory and population, we could not defend ourselves.”
And having endured 50 years of
occupation, “we know what that is.”
After the USSR fell apart, Ukraine
thought it could continue “without radical changes” at home and in its
relations with others. “Now you have had to pay a heavy price to be convinced
that this is not the case.”
“Ukraine must not think about
whether Russia will be satisfied, happy or glad as a result of Ukraine’s
actions. The entire situation is like that which Moliere describes in his play
about the imaginary invalid, “who all the time is sick and accusing all those
around it of causing his imaginary illnesses.”
When such people invade your
territory, however, the only thing to do is to defend oneself, the Latvian
leader says, rather than listen to Russian claims about its “’special status,
to which all of us must bow down and
show respect.” Russia is a large country but that “doesn’t give them any
privileges” over others. Thinking otherwise only creates problems.
“We have our manners, rules of
behavior, international agreements and principles,” Vaika-Freiberga says. Now
the Russian attack has “unceremoniously” violated them. We “don’t need to turn
to psychoanalysis” or think that it is “so important ‘to understand Russia’s
feelings.’” We need to defend against it.
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