Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 26 – As rumors
swirl that Presidents Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin will discuss Ukraine and
possibly make a deal about them, Ukrainian officials say that there must not be
any discussion about them without them and Ukrainians experts add that
regardless of any such “deal,” Ukrainians are ready to fight to defend their
country.
Ukraine’s deputy foreign minister
Elena Zerkal said today that Kyiv is concerned that Trump in his pursuit of a
deal with Putin may be ready to discuss a resolution of the Russian-Ukrainian
conflict without the participation of any representative of the Ukrainian side
(nakanune.ru/news/2017/1/26/22459205/).
“We do not want to be excluded from
talks” where the future of Ukraine may be discussed, she continued. “We do not
want to be a bargaining chip” for others; “we want to be a full participant.” But Russian officials have repeatedly
insisted that Ukraine has no place in such talks because, according to their
false claim, Russia is not involved militarily in Ukraine.
Whether the United States will agree
with Kyiv or whether in pursuit of a deal with Moscow it will sideline the
Ukrainians, however, may make less difference to what will happen next because
regardless of what Trump does, Kyiv experts say, Ukrainians remain committed to
fighting for their country against Russian aggression.
The Kyiv Center for Research on the
Army, Conversion and Disarmament has released a new report, “Challenges and
Risks for Ukraine: The Main Tendencies in the Security Sphere for
January-February 2017 (cacds.org.ua/ru/safe/news/992). Kseniya Kirillova
excerpts and summarizes it for Radio Liberty (ru.krymr.com/a/28260594.html).
The report says that any agreement
between Trump and Putin “can inflict great harm on Ukraine” by promoting “a new, earlier unheard
of re-division of spheres of influence” in Eastern Europe and a change in the
balance between Russia and the US around the world. Moreover, it adds, there is
a risk that some European countries will follow any new American line.
At the same time, the Kyiv research
center says that Trump may be restrained in reaching an accord with Putin by
some of his own cabinet members and also by Republicans in the US Congress. But
while these forces may slow a rapprochement between Washington and Moscow,
Ukrainians would be wrong to expect that they will prevent it.
The report continues by pointing to
another trend which is working against Ukraine: the rise of “an ideology of
double standards” in which Ukraine is blamed for all kinds of things and Russia
is not blamed even for the things it so obviously has done. Indeed, in the
West, few officials use the words “war” or “aggression” in the case of Russian
actions in Ukraine.
Over time, this works for Moscow and
against Ukraine, the Kyiv report continues, because ever more Ukrainians are
discouraged and even are displaying less patriotism than they did and because
of “the worsening conditions of the development of a professional [Ukrainian]
army.”
Other analysts, Kirillova points
out, note that “about 95 percent” of the weapon systems Ukraine has are “more
than 25 years old” and that the lack of sufficient financing – and she might have
added restrictions imposed by Western governments on what Ukraine is able to
purchase make this problem even worse.
According to the new Kyiv report,
the Ukrainian government’s reluctance to attack anywhere lest it provoke
Russian “terrorist groups” has allowed the latter to achieve “tactical
advantages” on the battlefield even as it has increased discouragement among
Ukrainians that they will ever gain a victory.
Moscow is exploiting this to promote
the destabilization of Ukraine and the re-arrangement of its political system
to Russia’s benefit. And it is also
taking advantage of the position of Kyiv and the West to militarize
Russian-occupied Crimea, a development that is also intended to intimidate both
of its opponents.
But the report continues, not
everything is going against Ukraine. Its military units are improving in
quality and its development program gives hope that the Ukrainian army will
become ever more capable over the next several years, and consequently, Mikhail
Samus, the deputy director of the Kyiv center, says that “Ukraine is moving in
the correct direction.”
As a result, he adds, “even Putin’s
hopes for a deal with Trump and a Yalta-2 agreement will not help change the
situation” in Russia’s favor. “In simplest terms, if the Ukrainians in the future
will fight with Russia, no Trump will be able to help Putin.”
Russia is too weak for that. It
lacks the time and resources “for a major campaign against Ukraine,” Samus
says. Consequently, “now Moscow’s main
hope is internal destabilization” through the political system via “the
activities of ‘a fifth column’ and agents of the Russian special services
inside Ukraine.”
If Ukraine is able to solve its
economic problems, and if at the same time, Russia is not and faces ever more
difficulties in that sector, he concludes, Russia will face a more complicated future,
one in which it will have to consider what it can afford to do – and equally
what it can no longer afford as well.
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