Paul Goble
Staunton, Jan. 11 – The possibilities of ending the war in Ukraine by negotiation can be understood only if one is clear about the declared and undeclared but nonetheless real goals of the three parties most immediately involved -- Russia, Ukraine and the United States, Vladimir Pastukhov says.
The London-based Russian analyst says that the Russia’s declared goals are “the defense of ‘the Russian world’ and ‘the liberation’ of Eastern Ukraine.” Its undeclared ones are “the infliction of a non-strategic defeat on the West in Ukraine o as to change the balance of relations between Russia and the West” (echofm.online/opinions/czeli-vojny-i-graniczy-kompromissov).
Among these desired changes is the establishment of red lines that the West cannot violate regarding countries within what Russia insists is within its zone. “For the Kremlin,” Pastukhov continues, “the very fact of the recognition of ‘red lines’ [by the West] means more than how and where they will be drawn.”
Ukraine’s declared goals are very different. They include the reversal of Russian occupied and annexed territories and the restoration of Kyiv’s control up to the borders of 1991. Its undeclared goals is to inflict a strategic defeat on Russia, one that would eliminate Russia as a threat in the future.
In both cases there are problems, Pastukhov suggests. Ukraine’s declared goals aren’t achievable; and even if Kyiv somehow did manage to do so, such an achievement by itself
not only would not lead to an automatic end of the war but more likely will lead instead to its escalation.”
And that explains why Ukraine has an undeclared goal of promoting the disintegration of the Russian Federation or at least a revolution in Moscow. Only one or both of these things would give Ukraine the victory it really seeks; but unfortunately, neither Ukraine nor the current position of the West makes such an achievement likely.
As for the West and above all the US, their declared goals are “helping Ukraine achieve its own declared goals” of recovering territory; but these allies of Ukraine are not interested in inflicting on Ukraine more than a non-strategic defeat lest that destabilize the international system even more than now.
Despite what some in Moscow say, the West does not have the strategic defeat of Russia as a goal and did not provoke the war in Ukraine to achieve that. But at the same time, the West “did not take any particular measures to prevent this conflict” by using its influence in Moscow or Kyiv.
“In a certain sense,” Pastukhov continues, “Zelensky is right that no effective pressure was put on Russia before Moscow began to bomb Kyiv. But at the same time, Putin is partially right as well: Kyiv did not have ‘the rules of the game’ explained to it; and as a result, the story of the Budapest memorandum was repeated.”
“The West was ready to help Ukraine with arms and money but not prepared to fight itself and doesn’t intend to do so in the future.” Had that been clear to all parties, the war might not have taken place but Ukraine would have had to accept a status it does not want, the London-based Russian analyst says.
What does all this mean? “The goals of the war for Russia and for Ukraine are antagonistic but for Russia and the West, they are not antagonistic.” And that in turn means that “the goals of Ukraine and the West in this war correspond only at a superficial level,” Pastukhov says.
“Ukraine is seeking the strategic defeat of Russia at a time when the West has put as its goal only its non-strategic defeat.” And that more than the subjective stances of Trump, Zelensky or Putin is going to play a key role in any negotiations or in the future course of the war, Pastukhov argues.
Specifically, “any negotiation process in which Putin appears as a subject and not as an object … will mean the achievement by Putin of his undeclared goals of the war, the return of subjectiveness to Russia, and the non-achievement by Ukraine of its undeclared goals of the de-subjectivization of Russia.”
And there thus exists “a serious risk that the West, the goals of which in this war are ambivalent will make a deal with Putin behind the back of Ukraine.” The question only is how long Zelensky and Ukraine will “permit themselves to ignore this risk” because it is for better or worse very real.
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Monday, January 13, 2025
Ukraine Can Achieve Its Goals Only if Russia Suffers a Strategic Defeat, Something West isn't Ready to Inflict, Pastukhov Says
Uniate Churches in Kazakhstan Help Ukrainians There Retain Identity and Orthodox There to Pursue Autocephaly
Paul Goble
Staunton, Jan. 12 – There are only six Greek Catholic (Uniate) churches in Kazakhstan and some of them do not even have their own facilities but must use Roman Catholic ones, but these churches are playing two important roles by helping ethnic Ukrainians retain their identity and assisting Orthodox in Kazakhstan to escape Moscow’s oversight.
The first of these roles is highlighted in a new article in Novaya Gazeta which discusses how Ukrainians in Kazakhstan, some who were sent there during Stalin’s times and others who moved there later, have turned to this church to retain their identity as Ukrainians (novayagazeta.eu/articles/2025/01/12/tam-splosh-58-ia-statia).
The second which involves the shift of believers from the Russian Orthodox Church in Kazakhstan who do not want to be subordinate to Moscow has been described by the SibReal portal at sibreal.org/a/smenit-moskvu-na-konstantinopol/33004030.html and discussed in more detail at windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2024/07/orthodox-in-kazakhstan-seeking.html).
The ROC MP likely views these two roles as complementary and re-enforcing but it appears that they are really separate with the ethnic Ukrainians viewing these churches as a defense of their identity and only Russian Orthodox who want to escape Moscow’s rule viewing them otherwise.
Nonetheless, it is entirely possible that because of Moscow’s concerns, these churches could become yet another flashpoint in relations between the Russian Federation and Kazakhstan.
Sunday, January 12, 2025
Clash in Russia Over Country's Future between Stalinists and Black Hundreds ‘Inevitable,’ Prilepin Says
Paul Goble
Staunton, Jan. 12 – Despite Putin’s efforts to combine the values of the Stalinists and the Black Hundreds, Zakhar Prilepin says, a clash between the two is inevitable; and on its outcome will depend not only how Russia is internally ordered but also how Moscow relates to the former Soviet space.
In the course of a wide-ranging 9,000-word article in Kazan’s Business-Gazeta, the writer and nationalist politician argues that the world as a whole is engaged in a choice about what civilizational project it will seek to realize in the future both at home and abroad (business-gazeta.ru/article/659600).
In Russia, Prilepin says, this choice is between those who want a post-war Russia to be “a mono-ethnic Russian state with minimal national autonomies so that the country will never again disintegrate” and those who want Russia to play a central role in the creation of a new international order “so that we again stand at the head of a great anti-colonial revolution.”
The former, which may be called the Black Hundreds vision, needs little to do with the former Soviet republics or other neighbors, while the latter, which is Stalinist in its orientation, wants to dominate them and expand Russian influence far beyond the current borders of the Russian Federation.
“These two concepts are already starting to fight each other. I think that in Russia there will be a clash between these two ideas,” Prilepin says. “The left, Leninist-Stalinists, on the one hand, and the neo-White Guards, Black Hundreds, on the other, are already gathering in two large flocks, and a clash between them seems inevitable to me today.”
Putin has a foot in both camps. Thus he has restored the Soviet anthem but talks about Ilyin, brought back the red banner but also Solzhenitsyn, and promotes How the Steel was Tempered as well as The Gulag Archipelago. But “the entire political system can’t be that complex and people are being increasingly pulled to one pole or another.
Consequently, the direction Russia will take will depend on the outcome of this clash, Prilepin suggests.
FSB Designates 172 Ethnic and Regional Groups ‘Terrorist’ Organizations
Paul Goble
Staunton, Jan. 11 – The FSB has designated 172 ethnic and religious groups associated with the Forum of Free States of PostRussia “terrorist organizations” because that group has called for its followers to work for the decolonization of Russia and to take part in defending Ukraine against Russian aggression.
Among those so described are Asians of Russia, Free Buryatia, Free Yakutiya, New Tyva, the League of Free Nations, the Association of Indigenous Peoples of the Russian Federation, Free Idel-Ural, Free Bashkortostan, the Congress of Peoples of the North Caucasus, the All-Tatar Social Center, and the Karelian National Movement (zona.media/news/2025/01/10/spisok-172 and nemoskva.net/2025/01/11/fsb-dobavila-v-spisok-terroristicheskih-172-obedineniya-vklyuchaya-naczionalnye/).
This move follows a decision by the Russian General Procurator to declare the Forum an “undesirable” organization in March 2023 and a ruling by the Supreme Court upholding that position (novayagazeta.eu/articles/2023/03/17/genprokuratura-priznala-nezhelatelnoi-organizatsiiu-forum-svobodnykh-narodov-postrossii-news and t.me/genprocrf/4472).
Among the other institutions the FSB has now declared a “terrorist organization” is the Komi Daily, even though it has no relationship with the Forum. Its leaders are now seeking legal redress against the FSB move (t.me/komi_daily/706 and moscowtimes.ru/2025/01/12/vrossii-vpervie-priznali-smi-terroristicheskoi-organizatsiei-a152081).
This new enumeration of terrorist groups includes some about which nothing has ever been heard and it is entirely possible that the FSB has done more to advertise the existence of such trends than any of those involved could have achieved on their own (e.g., the case of the hitherto unheard of Oryol Autonomous Republic (t.me/orlec/2195).
Russian Monastery Near Kazan Publishes Booklet Declaring Opponents of War in Ukraine ‘Cowards’ and ‘Traitors’
Paul Goble
Staunton, Jan. 10 – The Raifa Bogoroditsky Monastery, a Russian Orthodox outpost in Tatarstan, has issued a booklet declaring that Russians who oppose the war in Ukraine are “cowards,” “traitors” and consumerists more concerned about their own well-being than that of Russia.
The booklet urges Orthodox parishioners to show “deep respect … for those who have gone to fight” because Russia is “certainly right” in carrying out “a special operation” given that on occasion, war is “the only possible manifestation of active love” (nemoskva.net/2025/01/11/net-vojne-krichat-trusy-i-veshhelyuby-potrebiteli-tak-napisano-v-bukletah-duhovnye-smysly-svo-ih-razdayut-v-hramah/).
According to the booklet’s authors, who are not specified by name, war has other advantages because the experiences with death it provides those who take part in it, helps the faithful to decide whether “you are a believer or an unbeliever.” And it warns that “radical pacifism contradicts not only Christian traditions but elementary human logic.
There are likely many such publications being put out by ROC MP branches, and their extreme militance shows yet again the wars in which the Moscow church is becoming ever more the ideological arm of the Kremlin as the war in Ukraine progresses (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2024/10/moscow-patriarchate-set-to-follow.html).
That militarist stance of the Russian church undoubtedly pleases the powers that be, but there is growing evidence that it is driving away many who had attended its services because its current message is so at odds with the Biblical traditions of Christianity (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2025/01/only-about-half-as-many-russians.html).
Belarus to Open Embassy at the Vatican
Paul Goble
Staunton, Jan. 10 – The Belarusian government has announced that it plans to open an embassy at the Vatican later this year, a reflection of the facts that six to ten percent of the Belarusian population, centered in Grodno Oblast, is Roman Catholic and that the Vatican is one of the few foreign states that has hosted Belarusian dictator Alyaksandr Lukashenka.
This announcement has attracted the attention of Moscow commentator Vsevolod Shimov because the Catholics of Belarus have been among the most active participants in demonstrations against Lukashenka while the Catholic hierarchy in his country has been loyal (fondsk.ru/news/2025/01/09/belorusskaya-katolicheskaya-cerkov-mezhdu-polshey-i-vatikanom.html).
Whether the opening of an embassy will affect that or the balance between Polish and Belarusian sympathies among Belarusian Catholics remains uncertain, but one thing is likely: when there is a transition in Belarus, the Catholic leadership is likely to play a major role and involve both the embassy and the nuciature (there since 1992) as well as the clergy.
Saturday, January 11, 2025
War in Ukraine Slowing Moscow's Drive to Regain Blue Water Navy Able to Challenge the West
Paul Goble
Staunton, Jan. 10 – A decade ago, Russia was on its way to losing any pretense to having a blue water navy, that is a stock of capital ships capable of operating far from the Russian coast (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2016/12/russian-blue-water-navy-in-reality-now.html, windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2017/04/moscow-can-no-longer-afford-blue-water.html and windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2017/12/russias-surface-navy-on-its-way-to.html).
Now, given Putin’s geopolitical ambitions, Moscow is seeking to recover that capacity under the direction of Nikolay Patrushev, former secretary of the Russian Security Council who now heads the Naval Collegium (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2024/11/patrushev-denounces-western-moves-on.html).
One sign of this is that the Russian navy is sending its still restricted number of capital ships on ever longer voyages in order to show the flag while it works to overcome the problems in this sector and especially its shipbuilding branch given both corruption and sanctions (thebarentsobserver.com/news/northern-fleet-gives-priority-to-faraway-voyages/422736).
Another indication is its refitting of older ships with nuclear power and more modern electronic systems, although that approach can only go so far given the age of the ships involved like the Admiral Nakhimov in drydock since 1999 (meduza.io/news/2025/01/11/na-kreysere-admiral-nahimov-zapustili-yadernyy-reaktor-korabl-remontiruyut-s-1999-goda).
As long as the war in Ukraine continues, Moscow has little choice but to use this tactic, yet another indication that that conflict by itself is preventing the Kremlin from developing the kind of deep water navy that could challenge the US and other Western powers in key parts of the world’s oceans.