Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 13 – Ukrainians and
their friends and supporters have been so worried that any grand bargain
between Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump will be a new “Munich” in which Ukraine
will be handed over in whole or in part to the Kremlin that they have not
considered fully just what any “deal” might look like, Petr Oleshchuk says.
The Kyiv political scientist who
teaches at Shevchenko National University says that they should be given that
such “’a broad accord’ between Russia and the US really is being considered at
the evel of people who are responsible for foreign policy in the Trump
Administration” (nv.ua/opinion/oleschuk/mjunhen-dlja-ukrainy-463867.html).
This week, Rex
Tillerson, Trump’s nominee to be secretary of state, said that the US could
recognize Crimea as Russia if there were to be “a broader agreement which the people
of Ukraine would recognize.” There are “several
logical conclusions” which flow from this, Oleshchuk argues.
First of all, it suggests that
people on Trump’s foreign policy team are considering just such “a broad
agreement … that is ‘a big deal’” and something which is no longer in the realm
of “conspiracy thinking but is a reality, although still only hypothetical,”
the Kyiv analyst suggests.
Second, Tillerson’s words imply that
any “’big deal’” would be possible “only if there were agreement on the part of
the leadership of Ukraine.” Clearly, Trump’s people now recognize that any
unilateral move by Washington on this question would “destroy the world order,”
while that could be maintained if Ukraine itself agreed to a shift.
And third, Oleshchuk says, those who
want a deal must thus be thinking about how to get Kyiv on board, perhaps by
putting pressure on the Ukrainian leadership or perhaps by trying to buy it off
or “most probably” by “a combination of the first and the second: promises of ‘Marshal Plans and threats of ‘a Russian
attack.’”
To be sure, Ukrainians should expect
especial generosity. “Even if one approaches Crimea as ‘a good’ to be
exchanged, no one will give the real price for it.”
And there are two more aspects of
the situation that Ukrainians must keep in mind. On the one hand, any grand
bargain between the US and Russia will not be about Ukraine alone but about
other issues including china. And on the other, if Trump can’t get a deal with
Moscow quickly, then his interest in any such deal will wane quickly.
Consequently, if there isn’t “a
Munich” this year, there is not likely to be one in the future, Oleshchuk says,
a conclusion that makes an implicit argument of exactly how Kyiv should
proceed.
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