Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 24 – The scandal arising
from Yevgeny Shevchenko’s suggestion on Moscow TV that Ukrainian defenders
rather than Russian aggressors are responsible for the continuation of the war is
the latest surfacing of what may be the views of many in Vladimir Zelensky’s
party, Servants of the People, Vitaly Portnikov says.
After all, Shevchenko represents that
party in the Verkhovna Rada, the Ukrainian commentator notes; and what he said
on Moscow television is not far removed from what other members of it even
closer to the Ukrainian president have said in recent weeks (graniru.org/opinion/portnikov/m.277747.html).
Kyiv media are reporting that the
Ukrainian parliament’s Servants of the People plans to discuss “’the behavior’”
of Shevchenko at its next meeting. “But
why?” Portnikov asks. He simply repeated
what others more highly placed in that party, including Andrey Bogdan, the head
of the Presidential Office, David Arakhamiiya, head of the Servants of the People
fraction in the Verkhovna Rada, and President Zelensky himself have said.
Shevchenko’s
action is “interesting” because “he simply repeated on a big Russian television
screen what his bosses and many comrades in arms are saying in the corridors”
of power in Kyiv. He has thus shown
himself and the others as “collaborationists,” quite prepared to work for those
who invaded Ukraine rather than those who have defended it.
For many such people and those who ally
themselves with them either out of conviction or short-term calculation,
Portnikov continues, “the Russian ‘brothers’ are much closer in spirit than
their own compatriots who have been defending their country at the front and in
the streets of Kyiv and other cities of the country.”
But of course, these Ukrainians “don’t
want to be ‘brothers;’ they want again to become masters of unthinking Little
Russia slaves.” Putin has shown he doesn’t want an agreement with Ukraine: he
wants surrender. And to that end, the Kremlin leader has added one condition
after another for those Ukrainians who want to do so to have to meet.
“If Zelensky or Shevchenko were honest
with themselves or even with their own voters,” Portnikov concludes, “they
would tell them the truth: the war can be ended” in the way they propose – “stop
shooting” – but only if Ukrainians are prepared “to live on their knees and not
get up.”
And
it is against that prospect that “real Ukrainian citizens are protesting,
citizens who never want to be anyone’s ‘servants.’”
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