Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 18 – In an
important two-part essay, Russian commentator Andrey Piontkovsky argues that
there is now a good chance that the Donbass will remain “a frozen conflict”
rather than be resolved either by the capitulation of Ukraine or by a new round
of military aggression by Russia.
The reason for that is that in both
cases, a frozen conflict – that is a ceasefire without any fundamental changes
beyond that – is “the lesser evil,” albeit for very different reasons in the
two capitals, the commentator says (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5DA890F56578C
and kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5DAA1BD588F17).
The
greater evil for Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky would have been to
simply implement the Steinmeier plan as Moscow and many Western leaders hoped,
an action that would have given Russia leverage over all Ukraine if it had
happened and would have sparked a social revolt if it appeared Zelensky was
going to agree to it.
The
greater evil for what Piontkovsky calls “the moderate imperialists” in Moscow
would have been the creation of a situation in Ukraine that the Russian war
party would exploit to launch a new wave of aggression there or elsewhere,
something that would lead to the further isolation of Russia and to their own
marginalization in the Kremlin.
When
Zelensky agreed to the Steinmeier plan, it appeared to many in Ukraine, Moscow
and the West that he was prepared to capitulate. Many in Moscow were jubilant,
many in the West were relieved, but many in Ukraine were outraged, with ever
more people taking to the streets to object to such a sell-out after five years
of fighting Russian aggression.
But
only a few days later, at a meeting of the Minsk contact group, Ukraine’s
representatives made clear that they weren’t prepared to accept the provisions
of Steinmeier and were going to insist on others that Moscow at present at
least simply won’t or perhaps even can’t accept.
That
means, Piontkovsky says, that “having freed itself” from the trap of the return
of the Donbass under Putin’s terms, “the new Kyiv authorities can now
concentrate on the fulfillment of their main promise thanks to which they were
elected in triumph, the achievement of peace,”
something they can’t force by military means but can hold open by not
making concessions.
Under
these conditions, the commentator says, a ceasefire is possible, involving “a
stable end to shooting along the line dividing the sides and an end to the
deaths of people,” with the Ukrainian military “standing on this line capable
of preventing the further broadening of Russian aggression.”
“This
is far from an ideal scenario for Ukraine, but it is the least bad of all those
possible today,” Piontkovsky argues. It
keeps Moscow from inserting a cancerous tumor into the body politic of Ukraine
and it helps ensure that Zelensky and his regime will not be challenged in the
streets with a new Maidan.
Piontkovsky
suggests that there is a clear historical analogy for this. “In 1952, Comrade
Stalin proposed to Konrad Adenauer, the first chancellor of the Federal
Republic of Germay, to ‘reunite’ the GDR, but with the maintenance there of the
Stasi, the SEPG, and the presence of Soviet forces.”
Adenauer
responded that “it is better for me to have half of Germany but whole rather
than all of Germany but only half.”
Eventually, of course, “the heirs of Adenauer got all of Germany and
they got it whole.”
Obviously,
Zelensky’s shift does not mean the end of the game. Moscow is furious, and
Mariya Zakharova of the Russian Foreign Ministry declared that Moscow “doesn’t
consider the declaration [in Minsk] the consolidated position of Kyiv,” a clear
indication that Russia hasn’t given up getting what it thought it had with
Steinmeier.
After its initial failure to create
Novorossiya, Piontkovsky continues, Moscow devoted almost five years to
promoting its “Trojan horse” plan to force the inclusion of a
Russian-controlled Donbass into the body of Ukraine. Now that has failed, and
it will have to come up with a new strategy.
That
process will be different than the one in Ukraine: “Russia isn’t Ukraine. Its
people are silent, and a civil society is lacking. Strategic decisions are worked
out under the rug, but there are real bulldogs” fighting there. The radical
imperialists, including Patrushev, Kovalchuk, Sechin and S. Ivanov, want war
and will seek it now that Kyiv has rejected Moscow’s plan.
But
there is also “a party of ‘moderate imperialists’” in Moscow, who want to
expand Moscow’s influence but are convinced that any direct use of military
power will prove counterproductive, generating a reaction in the West that the
Russian government certainly doesn’t need.
In many ways, Aleksey Venediktov, the head of Ekho
Moskvy, has assumed the role of the public spokesman for such people. In a recent broadcast, he even cited
Piontkovsky’s arguments about lesser and greater evil to argue for a different
outcome than the one that the mobilization party wants (echo.msk.ru/programs/observation/2500789-echo/).
For
Venediktov and those who think like him, Piontkovsky says, it appears that “the
freezing of the conflict is the least bad decision” available, far better than
a new wave of direct Russian military aggression.
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