Paul Goble
Staunton,
November 22 – This week marks the fifth anniversary of the Maidan in Ukraine,
an event that challenged an axiom that almost all analysts of the post-Soviet
space hold, Arkady Babchenko says. That axiom holds that the empire’s
possessions can escape from its influence and control only when the empire is weakened
but in no case when it is strong.
That
helps to explain Vladimir Putin’s reaction to it, the Ukrainian commentator
says, because if the Ukrainian alternative were to spread, that by itself would
contribute to the weakening and ultimate dismemberment of the Russian imperial
state and its pretentions to control the post-Soviet space (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5BF64DF385F63).
With the Maidan,
Babchenko continues, “Ukraine was able to achieve what no other country has.
Not one! All the countries of Eastern Europe
… which fell under the imperial boot could break out of it only when the empire
began to fall apart. Poland, the GDR, the Baltic countries, and the Caucasus broke
out only when the empire became weak.”
Ukraine alone was able to escape from
Moscow’s domination “at the peak of its latest rise to power, the only one in
Europe, the only one in the world,” the commentator continues. “No one. Could.
Do. that which we Did,” he says. And that is because the participants in the
Maidan stood up “not for sausage but for freedom and dignity.”
That is a powerful force, one
capable of working miracles even against those like Putin who may have powerful
resources of other kinds. It did in this
case, and so calling the Maidan a revolution for dignity is the best way to
ensure its ultimate victory and the victory of others currently repressed or
dominated by the Kremlin.
Indeed, one could say, although Babchenko does not, that this was Ukraine's application of a "hybrid" force against Putin's Russia, a force that was all the more powerful because the other side at least initially did not understand what had been deployed against it.
Indeed, one could say, although Babchenko does not, that this was Ukraine's application of a "hybrid" force against Putin's Russia, a force that was all the more powerful because the other side at least initially did not understand what had been deployed against it.
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