Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 26 – The decision of
the Parliamentary Assembly of the Congress of Europe to readmit Russia as a
full member despite Moscow’s failure to make any changes in the policies which
caused PACE to suspend its membership earlier is not only shameful but thoroughly
undermines the existing international system.
Those who voted to seat Russia – and
fortunately for the continent’s reputation – many national delegations did not –
were swayed not only by the prospect of gaining money the organization needs
from Moscow but also by two arguments both of which must be rejected, Aleksandr
Skobov says (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5D12588C22D4D).
Some who voted to reseat the
aggressor said that “punishing the Russian Federation for aggression is not
part of the responsibilities of the Council of Europe,” the Moscow analyst
says. Other organizations exist for that purpose; but it was not so long ago,
that PACE itself voted to suspend Russia’s membership precisely on that basis.
And others who voted to reseat
Moscow declared that “no aggression by the Russian Federation must deprive its
citizens of the possibility of appealing to the European Court.” But in fact, Skobov says, that is precisely
what must happen: “Citizens of an aggressor state must deal with the consequences
of aggression by their country.”
The citizens of such countries must
lose not only that benefit but also “immunity from the lifting of the
moratorium on the death penalty,” Skobov says. They must recognize that what
their government is doing abroad is putting their lives and welfare at risk.
Otherwise they will have little reason to reject the arguments of the Kremlin
that might makes right.
But Skobov’s most important and
damning observation is the following: “When existing international institutions
begin to act in such a horrific contradiction with their declared principles,
the international order based on them is irretrievably destroyed. And any new one will have to be built from
zero after the results of a global international crisis.”
That is how the international system
functions. No other possibility exists. “To correct the mistakes of the
present-day European establishment and organize a new international order” is
not going to be easy, and the system that appears most likely to emerge in the
near future will not be an order based on laws but rather a jungle in which unpunished
violence will rule.
There is little positive anyone can
say about what PACE has done in following the wishes of the leading countries
of old Europe to go back to doing business with Russia as if its aggression in
Ukraine had never happened and ultimately to ending the sanctions regime as
Moscow now expects.
But some in Europe, especially in
the countries neighboring Russia, were not willing to go along. The resolution
readmitting Russia to full membership passed by a vote of 116 for, 62 against, with
15 abstentions. (On the distribution of votes by country, see the map at svobodaradio.livejournal.com/4044879.html.)
And
seven delegations – from Estonia, Georgia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Slovakia
and Ukraine, all countries with sad experience of Russian actions past and
present – have asked their governments to recall them from the Parliamentary
Assembly in protest over when that body has done (rbc.ru/politics/26/06/2019/5d13ce139a794774b3321415).
But despite that protest, Putin and
those like him who do not think that there should be any law higher than brute
force have won, aided and abetted in old Europe by those who refuse to remember
what happened the last time that principle was accepted and by the current
leadership of the United States which wants all the powers of a hegemon without
any of its responsibilities.
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