Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 14 – The swap of
35 Russian prisoners for 35 Ukrainian ones recalls the 1976 exchange between
the Soviet Union and the West of Chilean communist Luis Corvalan for Soviet
dissident Vladimir Bukovsky, Vadim Shtepa says. “This was an exchange between different
civilizations, and probably the Russian-Ukrainian conflict has reached that
level.”
In a commentary for Tallinn’s Postimees,
the editor of the Region.Expert portal says that this divide was underscored by
the way in which Moscow and Kyiv received the returning prisoners of the other
side (leht.postimees.ee/6776828/vadim-stepa-tsivilisatsioonidevaheline-vahetuskaup
and in Russian at region.expert/exchange/).
In Kyiv, Shtepa
continues, the returning Ukrainians were welcomed not only by their families
and friends but by the president of the country; but in Moscow, those who had
come back were not given such treatment but instead hustled off in busses with
darkened windows surrounded by police.
This difference is already standard
operating procedure. Ukraine treats its returning soldiers as “national heroes”
while Russia seeks to surround them with secrecy because according to the Kremlin’s
preferred version of events, they were never there and must not be acknowledged
to have been even if they are killed.
But this contrast in the way the
returnees were treated is not the only indication of the civilizational divide
between Russia and Ukraine. Equally important, Moscow pressed for the return of
Vladimir Tsemakh, someone with knowledge of the shooting down of the Malaysian
jetliner, lest Kyiv turn him over to the Dutch to testify.
Such Russian insistence, of course,
in effect confirmed what many now believe, that Moscow itself was behind that
tragedy, and it shows that for the Russian side, covering up what happened is
more important than rescuing its own citizens, Shtepa says.
Observers are still arguing about “who
won from this exchange,” he continues.
Russia did force Kyiv to give up a witness to a Russian crime but by so
doing in effect confirmed the reality it has been trying to hide. Ukraine,
however, showed that it operates according to “other and humanistic principles.”
And consequently, “Ukraine acted in
this exchange as a representative of Western civilization which defends freedom
and the dignity of its citizens, while Russia represented a different civilization,”
one concerned about protecting its reputation and covering up its military
crimes.
“Thirty years ago, in this clash of
civilizations, the free world won,” Shtepa says. The question now is whether it
will do so again.
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