Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 26 – Russia’s
latest act of aggression in the Kerch Straits show two things, Timofey
Milovanov says. On the one hand, Vladimir Putin has no plans to stop such
actions as long as Ukraine exists. And on the other, Ukraine can’t count on genuine
support from the West and the international community.
As a result, the deputy head of the
Council of the National Bank of Ukraine says, Kyiv must recognize that it “is
not in a position to stop Russia. It doesn’t control the course of events. It
is short-signed and focused on immediate tasks, and it has put off the carrying
out of fundamental reforms” (nv.ua/opinion/kak-pobedit-rossiju-shest-shahov-2509519.html).
The only positive
way forward, Milovanov continues, is to clearly recognize that “Russia’s goal
is to subordinate the Ukrainian government to itself or to replace it by one
Moscow controls. In a word, it would
like to teach Ukraine a lesson: the country must surrender and uniting with the
EU must be taken off the agenda.”
To effectively
counter Moscow then, he says, “Ukraine must convince Russia that it has finally
and irreversible ‘gone West.’” It “must
demonstrate that there is no path backward, despite the intensified efforts of
Russia” in that regard. And given this
understanding, it must “create stimuli for Russia to end the conflict.”
The banker proposes “six steps for
Ukraine thanks to which it will win a victory over the Russian Federation,” and
he pointedly notes that “the majority of them are in no way connected with
military action”:
·
First,
“the Ukrainian people must continue to insist on the transparency of the
government. Secret agreements with Russia by Ukrainian and Russian oligarchs
and also within the Ukrainian government itself must be cancelled.”
·
Second,
attract into the government, including the military, “as many pro-Western
specialists as possible,” people “who have lived or received their education abroad.”
Such people are a precondition for breaking entirely from the Soviet and
Russian pasts.
·
Third,
“weaken Russia’s business prospects by having Western companies sell off shares
offering the slightest benefit to the Russian oligarchs” and “introduce a visa
regime and strengthen border controls over trade with Russia.”
·
Fourth,
bring charges against Russia in international courts.
·
Fifth,
“arrest, charge or at least remove those who in government positions display
criminal inactivity. The country is at war!”
·
And
sixth, “continue essential reforms,” including guaranteeing the right of property
in Ukraine, focusing on the security of financial structures, reduce “ineffective
government expenditures,” open the country to more direct foreign investment
while closing off channels for money from Russia, protect the most socially
defenseless, bring more foreigners into the judicial system, and privatization
process, and change laws so that other countries can go after the corrupt.
“As in 2014,” Milovanov writes, “Ukrainians
must unite and fight the aggressor without waiting for the reaction of the West
or of their own government. Ukrainians must show the world that the Russian
king is naked. One cannot fight with the
enemy only half way. Either we struggle or we [will be compelled to] surrender.”
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