Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 17 – Many have been
speculating about what steps Russia and Ukraine must make to achieve a stable
peace, but in nearly every case, they ignore the fundamental reality that
Ukraine is a victim of Russian aggression and Moscow can’t be counted on to
refrain from further aggression unless Putin is convicted of war crimes, Yury
Shulipa says.
The director of Kyiv’s Institute of
National Policy says that one must begin any assessment of Russian-Ukrainian
relations with that fact and also that what is taking place now is “a
continuation of the existential struggle between Kievan Rus and the Golden
Horde,” between a country looking toward Europe and one part of Asia (vestnikcivitas.ru/pbls/4228).
It is deceptive
and wrong, Shulipa argues, to describe the current situation as “a conflict”
between the two countries. “Legally and factually, Ukraine is a victim of
Russian military, political and other aggression, and Russia is an aggressor
country.”
More specifically, he suggests, “the
root of the current problem … is very simple … After the disintegration of the
USSR, part of the citizens of Russia and a very small part of the citizens of
Ukraine suffered phantom pains from that event; and it seemed to them that the
USSR was alive and Ukraine should thus remain up to now subordinate to Moscow.”
“Until the victory of Kyiv’s
Euro-Maidan,” Shulipa says, “Ukraine in large measure continued to remain a
Muscovite political and economic colony.” Moscow “applied the doctrine of
limited sovereignty” to Ukraine, and Kyiv had only as much authority as Moscow
wanted to give.
What this means, the Ukrainian
analyst says, is that at least until 2014 with respect to Ukraine, “the USSR
did not fall apart completely but only partially. The victory of the
Euro-Maidan led to the exit of Ukraine from under the colonial influence of
Moscow” and the resumption of its pursuit of a European future.
Moscow couldn’t tolerate this and so
launched its war of aggression against Ukraine under the pretext of “defending
the Russian language population” of Ukraine, Shulipa continues. “For the senior
Russian leadership, seeing next to it a flourishing democratic state was
equivalent to death.”
Putin in particular was frightened
by the murder of Libyan dictator Qaddafi and “really is afraid of the overthrow
of his regime as the result of a Russian Maidan.” And to prevent those outcomes,
Shilupa says, the Kremlin leader launched and continues his war of aggression
against Ukraine.
As a result, the Ukrainian analyst
says, “Ukraine, the victim of Russian aggression, and Russia, the aggressor,
have nothing in common,” except their common state borders which Russia
continues to violate. Peace between them
can only be approached if the Budapest memorandum is enforced and if Russia is
so weakened that it heads toward collapse.
But even these things “will not
provide a guarantee that Russia’s aggression in one or another forms will end
in the future.” That will require that Putin and his senior aides be tried and
convicted in an international court of crimes against humanity and crimes of
war. Only that will allow a rapprochement of the two countries.
But even if that occurs, he
continues, it must be remembered that the two countries are on very different
trajectories. “Ukraine is moving in the future toward the construction of a
law-based democratic state of the Central European type and toward integration
in European and international institutions.”
Russia, in contrast, “is heading toward
the past, toward a hybrid syncretic Stalinisst-Nicholayevan empire” dominated
by a dictator and hostile to the values and norms of civilized countries. Ultimately,
that isn’t sustainable and Russia will collapse even as Ukraine strengthens
economically and politically.
When the Russian Federation
disintegrates, Rostov, Voronezh, Belgorod, Kursk, Bryansk, Kaluga, Moscow,
Yaroslavl, Smolensk, and Tver oblasts as well as others may join Ukraine, while
“the rest of Russia’s regions, for example, Tatarstan, Bashkortostan, Mordvinian
and others” will go their own way.
In sum, the Ukrainian analyst says, “the
stabilization of relations of Russia and Ukraine are impossible not only now
but in the long-term perspective.”
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