Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 22 – Just as British
voters rejected Winston Churchill after he had led the country to victory in
World War II because they wanted a new leadership for peacetime, so too
Ukrainian voters have rejected Petro Poroshenko after he led his country in
standing up to Russian aggression over the last five years, Dmitry Khandurin
says.
The Ukrainian commentator says that
he has “no doubt” that “after a certain time, “the overwhelming majority of
Ukrainians will be grateful and the people will be ashamed of their criticism
of him just as was the case in Great Britain nearly 75 years ago and allow him
to return (replyua.net/blog/144489-handurin-poroshenko-povtoril-put-legendarnogo-uinstona-cherchillya.html).
This analogy is not exact, of
course. Poroshenko did not defeat the aggressor and win the war as Churchill
did; but he did so something that few thought possible at the start of his term:
he rallied Ukrainian forces and kept Moscow from following through on its
aggression in Crimea and the Donbass with further and deeper attacks into
Ukrainian territory.
Moreover, the just defeated
president played a major role in the development of a military now far more
capable of resisting any Russian attacks and thus giving pause to anyone
thinking about attacking Ukraine – it would be extremely costly in lives and
treasure – and allowing Ukrainians a chance to focus more on domestic affairs.
Poroshenko only strengthened his
reputation by the dignified way he conceded defeat – see the complete text of
his concession speech at belaruspartisan.by/politic/461448/ -- and by the way he has behaved since the
vote, with a manner that sets him apart from many others who try to hold on no
matter what.
President Poroshenko did not do everything
right: he can be justly criticized on many grounds. But his role in strengthening
Ukraine both militarily and culturally, especially by his successful effort to
achieve autocephaly for Orthodoxy, is something that made the rise of someone
like Vladimir Zelensky possible.
Many in these days will see that as
his ultimate failure, but in fact, it was Poroshenko’s successes that allowed
Ukrainians to believe that they could and should now focus more on domestic
affairs. Moscow could act in ways that
will lead them to change their minds and soon, but Poroshenko must get credit
for having created a situation where they have a choice.
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